June 23, 2026

Midwest Storm Chasers

Live Weather Coverage & Severe Storm Reporting

⚠️ Flash Flood Warning – Choctaw, OK; Pushmataha, OK – Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Event Flash Flood Warning
Severity Severe
Urgency Immediate
Certainty Likely
Area Choctaw, OK; Pushmataha, OK
Effective 6/23/2026, 10:18:00 AM CDT
Expires 6/23/2026, 2:15:00 PM CDT

Flash Flood Warning issued June 23 at 10:18AM CDT until June 23 at 2:15PM CDT by NWS Tulsa OK

Details

FFWTSA

The National Weather Service in Tulsa has issued a

* Flash Flood Warning for…
Northeastern Choctaw County in southeastern Oklahoma…
Southwestern Pushmataha County in southeastern Oklahoma…

* Until 215 PM CDT.

* At 1018 AM CDT, Doppler radar indicated thunderstorms producing
heavy rain across the warned area. Radar estimates between 2 and 3
inches of rain have fallen. Additional rainfall amounts of 1 to 3
inches are possible in the warned area. Flash flooding is ongoing
or expected to begin shortly.

HAZARD…Flash flooding caused by thunderstorms.

SOURCE…Radar.

IMPACT…Flash flooding of small creeks and streams, urban
areas, highways, streets and underpasses as well as
other poor drainage and low-lying areas.

* Some locations that will experience flash flooding include…
Hugo… Antlers…
Rattan… Kellond…
Moyers… Kosoma…
Kent… Messer…
Hugo Lake State Park… Dela…
Finley… Speer…
Eubanks… Darwin…
Apple…

Instructions

Turn around, don’t drown when encountering flooded roads. Most flood
deaths occur in vehicles. In hilly terrain there are hundreds of low
water crossings which are potentially dangerous in heavy rain.

Flooding is occurring or is imminent. It is important to know where
you are relative to streams, rivers, or creeks which can become
killers in heavy rains. Campers and hikers should avoid streams or
creeks.

Please report observed flooding to local emergency services or law
enforcement and request they pass this information to the National
Weather Service when you can do so safely.


This alert was automatically posted by SkyGuard, MWSC’s severe weather alerting system. Source: National Weather Service.