Will Leverett (@312will) 's Twitter Profile
Will Leverett

@312will

Dog guy. Photographer. Storm chaser. Gamer nerd. Sports nerd. Bacon and pancake nerd. Director of Player Relations for Star Citizen.

ID: 28118695

linkhttps://stillwatersranchphotography.shootproof.com/gallery/eclipse/home calendar_today01-04-2009 14:45:26

43,43K Tweet

3,3K Followers

858 Following

Texas Storm Chasers ⚡ (@txstormchasers) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🚨 MANDATORY EVACUATION – SAN SABA, TX 🚨 The San Saba River is forecast to crest above 31 ft by midnight. 📍 Mandatory evacuation for areas: – South of the river – East of Hwy 16 – North of Hwy 190 Take this seriously. Leave now if in the zone. 📄 Official order: County of San

🚨 MANDATORY EVACUATION – SAN SABA, TX 🚨
The San Saba River is forecast to crest above 31 ft by midnight.

📍 Mandatory evacuation for areas:
– South of the river
– East of Hwy 16
– North of Hwy 190

Take this seriously. Leave now if in the zone.
📄 Official order: County of San
Will Leverett (@312will) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There are so many epic storm chaser content creators these days and Aaron's high up on that list. If you do nothing else, give this a watch at 12:00. Holy smokes. Top work, bravo.

Will Leverett (@312will) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Lake Buchanan has been through it in the past six years. Flooding often brings painful realities to our communities but is also the lifeblood of our overall water system in Central Texas. Wonderful to see it return to 100%.

John Honoré (@johnhonore) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Heavy rain continues to fall in portions of Texas. High resolution modeling is indicating that there will be more pockets of 4-8" rainfall with some isolated totals of up to 10" by sunrise on Tuesday... and more areas of heavy rain on Tuesday. Stay weather aware, Texas!!! #TXwx

Heavy rain continues to fall in portions of Texas. High resolution modeling is indicating that there will be more pockets of 4-8" rainfall with some isolated totals of up to 10" by sunrise on Tuesday... and more areas of heavy rain on Tuesday. Stay weather aware, Texas!!! #TXwx
Texas Storm Chasers ⚡ (@txstormchasers) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🚨 Flash Flooding Ongoing – Monday Midday Update 🚨 Moderate to heavy rain is falling between Sonora, Junction, Kerrville, and Uvalde, with the core of the activity just east of Del Rio. ⛈️ Rain is moving very slowly east, leading to: ▪ Flash flood warnings ▪ Rising rivers

🚨 Flash Flooding Ongoing – Monday Midday Update 🚨

Moderate to heavy rain is falling between Sonora, Junction, Kerrville, and Uvalde, with the core of the activity just east of Del Rio.

⛈️ Rain is moving very slowly east, leading to:
▪ Flash flood warnings
▪ Rising rivers
Bettie Cross (@bettiecrosstv) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Lake Buchanan before and after photos. These pictures were taken at Willow Point Resort on Lake Buchanan before the 4th of July flooding and after. “It hasn’t been this high, I would say, in 15 years,” said resort owner Gwen Carpenter. CBS Austin

Lake Buchanan before and after photos. These pictures were taken at Willow Point Resort on Lake Buchanan before the 4th of July flooding and after. “It hasn’t been this high, I would say, in 15 years,” said resort owner Gwen Carpenter. <a href="/cbsaustin/">CBS Austin</a>
Lower Colorado River Authority (@lcra) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Floodgate operations from Lake Buchanan today. LCRA opened a total of four floodgates at Buchanan Dam on July 14 – the first floodgate operations there since May 2019. This coordinated response helps manage significant water inflows across the Highland Lakes system.

Zack Shields FOX 7 (@zackshieldsfox7) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Before and after…Lake Travis has taken on a different look lately after the historic floods in the Hill Country. Over 200 billion gallons of water have gone into our lakes. My friend Gil Dominy sent me photos of what it looked like for 6 years on Lake Travis but now it is full.

Before and after…Lake Travis has taken on a different look lately after the historic floods in the Hill Country. Over 200 billion gallons of water have gone into our lakes. My friend Gil Dominy sent me photos of what it looked like for 6 years on Lake Travis but now it is full.