HailEvidence NWS storm records · per-address verification

HailEvidenceEvergreen, TX → 2026-03-07

Did it hail in Evergreen, TX on March 7, 2026?

Yes — NWS storm reports document 2 hail reports within 10 miles of Evergreen, TX on March 7, 2026, with hail up to 2.75" (baseball size).

These are preliminary same-day SPC storm reports; the official Storm Events record for this date is compiled by NWS over the following weeks. This page updates when it lands.

2hail reports ≤ 10 mi
2.75"largest hail · baseball
2wind reports

Every recorded report near Evergreen on 2026-03-07

Distances are from the Evergreen city centroid. Times as recorded by the source (SPC reports are UTC). Showing the nearest 4.

DistanceTypeSize / speedTimeReported nearSource
1.8 mi Wind speed n/a 04:43 UTC Roma, Starr SPC · preliminary
1.8 mi Wind speed n/a 05:43 UTC Roma, Starr SPC · preliminary
4.1 mi Hail 2.75" (baseball) 04:54 UTC Escobares, Starr SPC · preliminary
4.1 mi Hail 2.75" (baseball) 05:54 UTC Escobares, Starr SPC · preliminary

1.8 mi, wind: “KRGV posted photograph to Slack channel. Photograph shows wind damage to tree in Roma on Rev. Richard T. Peel Street. Tree appears several inches in diameter. (BRO)”

1.8 mi, wind: “KRGV posted photograph to Slack channel. Photograph shows wind damage to tree in Roma on Rev. Richard T. Peel Street. Tree appears several inches in diameter. (BRO)”

4.1 mi, hail: “Military reports baseball size hail on the Rio Grande River just south of Escobares in Starr County. (BRO)”

4.1 mi, hail: “Military reports baseball size hail on the Rio Grande River just south of Escobares in Starr County. (BRO)”

Was your property hit on 2026-03-07?

City-level reports won't settle a claim dispute — the question is what was recorded near your address. The verification report lists every NWS-recorded event within 1, 3 and 10 miles of a specific address, with this date highlighted as a plain-English finding, formatted for an insurance appeal.

Verify your address — $29 Evergreen hail history
NWS records are point and path observations. The absence of a nearby report does NOT prove that no hail fell at this address — it means no observation was logged nearby. A report of nearby hail documents the event; it does not by itself prove damage to a specific structure.

sources: NOAA SPC page updated 2026-06-12