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About Floods


What are floods and flashfloods?

The distinction between a flood and "flash-flood" is usually determined by the amount of warning (less than six hours for a flash-flood) that affected areas might receive prior to the flood conditions.

Flash floods may trigger hazardous events such as mud and landslides, structural bridge failures, and other threatening conditions. Rainfall intensity and duration are the primary source of flash floods. Intensity is the rate of rainfall, and duration is how long the rain lasts. Other factors include topography, soil conditions, and ground cover.

Floods are a long-term event and may last several days, or even weeks. Hurricanes and earthquakes directly cause flood conditions such as "storm surge" or tsunami respectively. There are also floods that have characteristics associated with the geographic areas they are in, such as river, coastal and urban flooding.

River Floods in Hawaii are usually triggered by hurricane or tropical storm rains.

Coastal Floods are caused by winds generated from tropical storms and hurricanes or intense offshore low pressure systems that can drive ocean water inland and cause significant flooding.

Urban Floods are triggered because the paved streets cannot absorb the rainfall. Therefore, the streets becomes a rivers and people can lose a lot of their property and some times their lives.


What is the difference between “watch,” “warning,” and “advisory?”

The National Weather Services uses specific words when they issue alerts to the public about dangerous flood-related conditions.

Flash flood watch: A flash flood is possible in the area, stay alert.

Flash flood warning: A flash flood is imminent or occurring; take immediate action.

Urban and small stream advisory: Flooding of small streams, streets, urban storm drains, and low lying areas.