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Days Of Rain From Texas To Florida Will Help With Drought, Wildfires For South, Southeast

Days Of Rain From Texas To Florida Will Help With Drought, Wildfires For South, Southeast

Rob Shackelford Sat, May 2, 2026 at 12:42 PM UTC

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More drought relief is on the way for the parched South as more rain will soak the region from Texas to Florida and the Carolinas through the weekend.

While it will take many more rounds to remove the drought completely, the parched region will take whatever Mother Nature can provide.

Where The Rain Is Now

The map below shows where rain is currently falling, along with any watches or warnings for severe thunderstorms or flash flooding.

Some parts of Louisiana and southern Mississippi have picked up 2 to 4 inches of rain since Wednesday morning. Thursday's heavy rain flooded a section of Interstate 10 and at least one other street in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

The Forecast

Below is a day-by-day forecast. Scroll through the maps to show the progression of rain through the weekend. The Florida Peninsula finally gets in on the act this weekend.

Saturday

Sunday

How Much More Rain?

In the Florida Peninsula, rainfall amounts should be less than an inch in most areas this weekend.

It won't completely quench the drought, but your gardens and lawns will take all the rain they can get.

In terms of rainfall we have seen so far, Birmingham, Alabama, saw 3.09 inches of rainfall from April 28-29, setting the daily rainfall record for April 29 (0.99 inches) and accounting for 60% of the city's rainfall in April.

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And Beyond?

There is more good news.

According to the Climate Prediction Center, the 6- to 10-day rainfall outlook shows above-average precipitation expected for Florida and much of the Deep South as we head toward next weekend as another frontal system sweeps in.

(MAPS: 7-Day US Rainfall Forecast)

How Bad Is The Drought?

Long story short, it’s bad.

Every part of Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee and Alabama is experiencing drought conditions. Arkansas and Florida are both 99% in drought. In fact, Florida is experiencing the worst drought in 25 years, writes senior meteorologist Jonathan Erdman.

(WATCH: Fires Spread Across Southeast In Midst Of Widespread Drought)

Charleston, Columbia, Gainesville and Savannah are currently experiencing their driest spring seasons to date, according to the Southeast Regional Climate Center.

Here are the latest drought conditions:

And here's what it looked like back in January:

Rob Shackelford is a meteorologist and climate scientist at weather.com. He received his undergraduate and master’s degrees from the University of Georgia studying meteorology and experimenting with alternative hurricane forecasting tools.

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Breaking”

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