Collier County Heavy Rain-Flood
September 29, 2003

 

      On September 29, 2003, a cold front stalled over central Florida…as a tropical disturbance moved from the southwest Caribbean Sea into the Southern Gulf of Mexico. This set up a southwest flow over southern Florida, and allowed for deep tropical moisture to move into south Florida from the Caribbean and southern Gulf of Mexico.

      Rainfall amounts between 4 inches to 8 inches fell across Collier County. But western Collier County got the heaviest of the rainfall with locally 8 to 10 inches. Marco Island received 8.10 inches of rainfall, Bonita Springs received 5.00 inches of rainfall, and Naples set an all time daily rainfall record of 6.93 inches.

      By early afternoon, Collier County Emergency Management Officials were asking everyone in the western Collier County to stay off the roads if they did not absolutely have to travel as canals were swelling and spilling over their banks, several roads were closed, and houses were starting to flood. There were also reports of people surfing in the streets in the Naples region of Western Collier County.

      By evening, most of the rainfall had ended over Collier County…but it took until late Tuesday (September 30, 2003) to get the streets and back yards of houses to dry out.


Baxter (National Weather Service, Miami Florida)

 


Hazards
Hazards
Tropics
Tropics

Radar
Radar

Satellite
Satellite

Obs
Obs

Forecasts
Forecast

Marine Forecasts
Marine

Climate
Climate
Wx2Go
OnTheGo

  • National Weather Service
  • Miami - South Florida Weather Forecast Office
  • 11691 SW 17th Street
  • Miami, FL 33165
  • 305-229-4522
  • Page Author: MFL Webmaster
  • Web Master's E-mail: sr-mfl.webmaster@noaa.gov
  • Page last modified: April 27th 2009 1:02 AM
USA.gov is the U.S. government's official web portal to all federal, state and local government web resources and services.