1. Although Hurricane Opal will remain over the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, abundant tropical moisture will stream north ahead of the system. 2. A slow disturbance moving east from the southern Rockies will draw abundant moisture north from central Texas to Kansas and western Missouri. 3. Abundant moisture moving to the north from the Gulf of Mexico will provide fuel for repeated heavy rains, with local flash flooding possible. 4. Abundant moisture will produce plenty of clouds with two major clusters of showers and thunderstorms erupting in the vicinity of the boundary. 5. Abundant moisture will flow from the Gulf of Mexico into the eastern half of the nation. 6. Abundant tropical moisture interacting with a slow-moving front will bring recurrent showers and thunderstorms to northern Florida and the extreme southern Atlantic coast. 7. Abundant moisture and a jet stream disturbance in the Southwest will promote cloudy skies and scattered showers from New Mexico to Idaho. 8. Abundant moisture will stream north from the Gulf of Mexico to the Northeastern states ahead of a slow-moving cold front. 9. In addition, a wind flow from the south will draw this abundant moisture north into the Ohio Valley. 10. It becomes unmanageable with abundant moisture, and some states outlaw it. |