July 18, 2026

Midwest Storm Chasers

Live Weather Coverage & Severe Storm Reporting

⚠️ Flood Warning – Val Verde, TX – Friday, July 17, 2026

Event Flood Warning
Severity Severe
Urgency Expected
Certainty Likely
Area Val Verde, TX
Effective 7/17/2026, 8:32:00 PM CDT
Expires 7/18/2026, 2:45:00 PM CDT

Flood Warning issued July 17 at 8:32PM CDT until July 19 at 9:45AM CDT by NWS Austin/San Antonio TX

Details

…The National Weather Service in Austin/San Antonio TX has issued
a Flood Warning for the following rivers in Texas…

Pecos River At Pandale Crossing affecting Val Verde County.

* WHAT…Minor flooding is occurring and minor flooding is forecast.

* WHERE…Pecos River at Pandale Crossing.

* WHEN…From this evening to late Sunday morning.

* IMPACTS…At 10.0 feet, (3.0 meters), Moderate flooding is well
into the flood plain making secondary roads and crossings along
the Pecos River and tributaries very dangerous to travel. Swimmers
and tubers should leave the river as flow is dangerously
turbulent. Campers vehicles and gear in the flood plain can be
swept downstream.
At 15.0 feet, (4.6 meters), Major flooding makes low water
crossings along the Pecos River and tributaries potentially
deadly. The flood wave moving downstream causes rapid rises
dangerous to campers on the low banks below Sheffield to Amistad
Reservoir. Autos and gear can be swept downstream.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS…
– At 8:15 PM CDT Friday the stage was 7.4 feet.
– Bankfull stage is 5.0 feet.
– Recent Activity…The maximum river stage in the 24 hours
ending at 8:15 PM CDT Friday was 7.4 feet.
– Forecast…The river will rise to 9.8 feet by early tomorrow
afternoon. It will fall below flood stage again late tomorrow
evening.
– Flood stage is 7.0 feet.
– http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood

Instructions

Turn around, don’t drown when encountering flooded roads. Most flood
deaths occur in vehicles.

Motorists should not attempt to drive around barricades or drive
cars through flooded areas.

Be especially cautious at night when it is harder to recognize the
dangers of flooding.

Even 6 inches of fast-moving flood water can knock you off your feet
and a depth of 2 feet will float your car. Never try to walk, swim,
or drive through such swift water. If you come upon flood waters,
stop, turn around and go another way.

Additional information is available at www.weather.gov.

The next statement will be issued Saturday afternoon by 245 PM CDT.


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