Today I attended a seminar lead by a scientist who specializes in storm surge research. One of the biggest things I learned about that I had never heard of was the storm surge "forerunner." It is basically another storm surge that travels ahead of the main surge and hits land 12-24 hours before the main surge. Most of the time it is weak but in some cases it can be strong. Apparently the 1900 Galveston storm and Hurricane Ike both had strong forerunners. In Ike's case it was responsible for most of the fatalities, as it happened before people had evacuated.
I found this paper with more information about it:
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com ... 11GL047090It seems it is more likely to be severe when it it forms from "large, strong, storms moving with moderate speed near wide, shallow, and smooth shelves" (quote from the paper).
So basically the coast of northeast Texas

I know I can't straddle the atmosphere...just a tiny storm in your teacup, girl.