Washington - United States   2026-03-18   Wednesday   47.71N, -121.36W

Skykomish

Washington - United States
2026-03-18

Flood Warning issued March 18 at 8:09PM PDT until March 22 at 2:49AM PDT by NWS Seattle WA

Issue date: 2026-03-19T03:09+00:00

...The Flood Warning continues for the following rivers in Washington... Snoqualmie River Near Carnation affecting King County. * WHAT...Minor flooding is occurring and moderate flooding is forecast. * WHERE...Snoqualmie River near Carnation. * WHEN...Until early Sunday morning. * IMPACTS...At 56.0 feet, the Snoqualmie River will cause widespread flooding from Fall City downstream through Carnation and Duvall... inundating much of the farm land and numerous roads. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - At 6:15 PM PDT Wednesday the stage was 55.2 feet. - Flood stage is 54.0 feet. - Recent Activity...The maximum river stage in the 24 hours ending at 6:15 PM PDT Wednesday was 55.2 feet. - Forecast...The river is expected to rise to 56.8 feet by early Thursday morning before falling throughout the day, getting below flood stage by Thursday evening at 53.3 feet. It will rise again overnight Thursday and into Friday morning before cresting again at 57.1 feet Saturday morning. It will return to below flood stage again early Saturday afternoon. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood

Flood Watch issued March 18 at 3:54PM PDT until March 20 at 5:00PM PDT by NWS Seattle WA

Issue date: 2026-03-18T22:54+00:00

* WHAT...Flooding caused by excessive rainfall continues to be possible. * WHERE...Portions of northwest and west central Washington, including the following counties, in northwest Washington, Skagit and Whatcom. In west central Washington, King and Snohomish. * WHEN...Through Friday afternoon. * IMPACTS...Excessive runoff may result in flooding of rivers, creeks, streams, and other low-lying and flood-prone locations. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - High snow levels, heavy rainfall, and snowmelt runoff will lead to continued rises on area rivers with additional flooding possible at times this week. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood