Home | Jobs | Cars | Apartments | Shopping | Buy CW Stuff | Advertise | Program Schedule | Contact Us
 
 
Programming
weather forecasts and alerts emailed daily to your inbox free

Find the weather for any city, state, zip code or country


Corpus Christi Naval Air Station-Truax, Texas

  National Weather Service:
Flood Warning , Coastal Flood Statement
    

Current conditions
As of 10:56 PM CDT
at Corpus Christi NAS, Texas

Mostly Cloudy
Temperature: 81°
Heat index:88°
Wind: SE 12 mph
Dewpoint: 77°
Humidity: 88%
Visibility: 6.0 miles
Forecast

As of 6:39 PM CDT on July 24, 2008

Rest of Tonight...Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Breezy. Lows in the upper 70s. Southeast winds 15 to 25 mph becoming 15 to 20 mph after midnight.

Friday...Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms in the morning...then partly cloudy in the afternoon. Breezy. Highs in the lower 90s. Southeast winds 10 to 20 mph increasing to 15 to 25 mph in the afternoon.

Friday Night...Partly cloudy in the evening then clearing. Lows in the mid 70s inland...in the upper 70s coast. Southeast winds 10 to 15 mph.

5-day forecast | Marine forecast | Air Pollution


Radar
Local radar » Loop
Regional radar » Loop

    Regional conditions
LocationConditionsTemp..
Corpus Christi (Corpus Christi Naval Air Station-Truax) Mostly Cloudy 81°
Corpus Christi (??) Haze 82°
Corpus Christi (??) Clear 82°
Corpus Christi (Corpus Christi International) Scattered Clouds 80°
Robstown Clear 79°
Fulton Overcast 83°
Kingsville Scattered Clouds 81°
Ben Bolt Overcast 81°
Corpus Christi (??) Overcast 81°
Falfurrias Mostly Cloudy 81°

5-day forecast
Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue
Chance of a Thunderstorm Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Chance of T-storms Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
90° | 79° 90° | 77° 90° | 79° 90° | 79° 90° | 79°

Almanac

Key: T = Trace of precipitation; MM = data not available
July 24, 2008
Normal high:94° Record high:105° (1934)
Normal low:75° Record low:69° (1999)
Sunrise:6:48 AM Moon Rise: No Moon Rise
Sunset:8:22 PM Moon Set: 12:44 PM
Complete weather almanac
Detailed History and Climate

Flood Warning
Issued by the National Weather Service at 10:26 PM CDT on July 24, 2008


The Flood Warning continues for
the Oso creek near Corpus Christi.
* Until further notice... or until the warning is cancelled.
* At 9:45 PM Thursday the stage was 20.3 feet.
* Flood stage is 20 feet.
* The creek crested near 21 feet this afternoon and will continue to
fall. The creek is expected to fall below flood stage overnight.

* At 20.0 feet moderate lowland flooding occurs... from the headwaters
near Violet Road... or farm to Market 24... to Oso Bay. Secondary
roads and low bridges near the creek are also flooded.





Back to top

Coastal Flood Statement
Issued by the National Weather Service at 11:46 am CDT on July 24, 2008


... Minor tidal overflow expected this afternoon through tonight
   along the barrier islands and bays of the coastal Bend...

Moderate to strong south to southeast winds will continue through
the afternoon hours as Tropical Storm Dolly slowly moves inland
into Mexico. In the wake of Tropical Storm Dolly... higher than
normal water levels are occurring in the bays along the middle
Texas coast.

Water levels are about 2 feet above normal in the bays. Expect
minor tidal overflow will continue into this evening as the Bay
water levels slowly decline through tonight.

Also... large swells continue to slowly subside over the coastal
waters as Dolly moves inland. Water levels remain about a foot
and a half above normal late this morning. Expect higher than
normal tide levels will occur again tonight around high
tide... with water reaching the dunes. High tide at Port Aransas
will be at 1105 PM tonight and at Port O'Connor at 754 am Friday
morning.

Driving along area beaches is not advised due to high waterlines.
If you become stranded... then leave your vehicle and seek safety
on higher ground. Swimming and other marine-related activities are
highly discouraged due to the threat from heavy surf and rip
currents. Heavy surf and rip currents pose a danger to anyone in
the water... even strong swimmers. If you are caught in a rip
current... do not panic and swim parallel to the shoreline to
escape the rip current.






Back to top


Copyright © 2008 The Weather Underground, Inc.