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Nicholas weakens to tropical depression, makes slow crawl over Texas and Louisiana

Tropical storm Nicholas weakened to a tropical depression early Tuesday evening, after slowing to a crawl over southeastern Texas and southwestern Louisiana but still drenching the region with flooding rains.

Galveston saw nearly 35 centimetres of rain from storm

Parts of a roof sit on top of a car parked at Blessings Tire and Auto Care following Hurricane Nicholas in Bay City, Texas, on Tuesday. (Elizabeth Conley/Houston Chronicle/AP)

Tropical storm Nicholas weakened to a tropical depression early Tuesday evening, after slowing to a crawl over southeastern Texas and southwestern Louisiana but still drenching the region with flooding rains.

The downgrade came the same day Nicholas blew ashore as a Category 1 hurricane, knocking out power to a half-million homes and businesses and dumping more than 30 centimetres of rain along the same area swamped by Hurricane Harvey in 2017.

Nicholas could potentially stall over storm-battered Louisiana and bring life-threatening floods across the Deep South over the coming days, forecasters said.

Nicholas made landfall early Tuesday on the eastern part of the Matagorda Peninsula and was quickly downgraded to a tropical storm.

Its centre was 95 kilometres east-northeast of Houston, with maximum winds of 55 km/h as of 7 p.m. CT Tuesday, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. However, weather radar showed the heaviest rain was over southwestern Louisiana, well east of the storm centre.

WATCH | Tropical storm Nicholas causes flash flooding in Texas:

Tropical storm Nicholas causes flash flooding in Texas

2 years ago
Duration 0:30
Heavy downpour in Texas left areas like Jamaica Beach flooded, with houses partially submerged.

The storm is moving east-northeast at nine km/h. The National Hurricane Center said the storm may continue to slow and even stall, and although its winds will gradually subside, heavy rainfall and a significant flash flood risk will continue along the Gulf Coast for the next couple days.

Galveston, Texas, saw nearly 35 centimetres of rain from Nicholas, the 14th named storm of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, while Houston reported more than 15 centimetres of rain. That's a fraction of what fell during Harvey, which dumped more than 152 centimetres of rain in southeast Texas over a four-day period.

In the small coastal town of Surfside Beach, about 105 kilometres south of Houston, Kirk Klaus, 59, and his wife Monica Klaus, 62, rode out the storm in their two-bedroom home, which sits about 1.8 to 2.4 metres above the ground on stilts.

"It was bad. I won't ever do it again," Kirk Klaus said.

'It looked like a river'

He said it rained all day on Monday and, as the night progressed, the rainfall and winds got worse.

Sometime around 2:30 a.m. Tuesday, the strong winds blew out two of his home's windows, letting in rain and forcing the couple to continually mop their floors. Klaus said the rainfall and winds created a storm surge of about 60 centimetres in front of his home.

"It looked like a river out here," he said.

Debris and damaged road construction are left in Houston, Texas, after tropical storm Nicholas, which made landfall as a hurricane and moved through the area on Tuesday. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

Nearby, Andrew Connor, 33, of Conroe, had not been following the news at his family's rented Surfside Beach vacation house and was unaware of the storm's approach until it struck. The storm surge surrounded the beach house with water, prompting Connor to consider using surfboards to take his wife and six children to higher ground if the house flooded.

The sea never made its way through the door, but it did flood the family sport utility vehicle, Connor said.

"When I popped the hood, I had seaweed and beach toys and all that stuff in my engine," he said.

More rain to come

Nicholas is moving so slowly it will dump several centimetres of rain as it crawls over Texas and southern Louisiana, meteorologists said. This includes areas already struck by Hurricane Ida and devastated last year by Hurricane Laura. Parts of Louisiana are saturated with nowhere for the extra water to go, so it will flood, said University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian McNoldy.

"It's stuck in a weak steering environment," McNoldy said Tuesday. So while the storm itself may weaken "that won't stop the rain from happening. Whether it's a tropical storm, tropical depression or post-tropical blob, it'll still rain a lot and that's not really good for that area."

Celbing Diaz is engulfed by a wave while fishing ahead of the storm on Monday in Galveston, Texas. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

More than a half-million homes and businesses had lost power in Texas, but that number dropped to about 200,000 by late Tuesday afternoon, according to the website poweroutage.us, which tracks utility reports. Most of those outages were caused by powerful winds as the storm moved through overnight, utility officials said. Across Louisiana, about 89,000 customers remained without power Tuesday afternoon.

Not as bad as Harvey

Nicholas brought rain to the same area of Texas that was hit hard by Harvey, which was blamed for at least 68 deaths, including 36 in the Houston area. After Harvey, voters approved the issuance of $2.5 billion US in bonds to fund flood-control projects, including the widening of bayous. The 181 projects designed to mitigate damage from future storms are at different stages of completion.

McNoldy, the hurricane researcher, said Nicholas is bringing far less rain than Harvey did.

Nicholas, expected to weaken into a tropical depression by Tuesday night, could dump up to 51 centimetres of rain in parts of southern Louisiana. Forecasters said southern Mississippi, southern Alabama and the western Florida Panhandle could see heavy rainfall as well.

On Tuesday, heavy rains from Nicholas pelted blue tarps that covered roofs damaged by Ida all over southern Louisiana.

Ida destroyed one building and left holes in the roof of the main plant at Motivatit Seafoods, a family-run oyster wholesaler in Houma, La. With rain from Nicholas pouring in on high-pressure processing equipment, owner Steven Voisin said he didn't know whether the machines could be saved after the latest round of tropical weather.

"And many people from here to New Orleans have this or more damage," he said. "They're not going to recover quickly or easily."

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