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5 months 2 weeks ago
No Mesoscale Discussions are in effect as of Wed Mar 26 23:49:02 UTC 2025.
5 months 2 weeks ago
WW 0065 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 65
THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA.
..LYONS..03/26/25
ATTN...WFO...PQR...SEW...
STATUS REPORT FOR WS 65
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
ORC003-005-009-027-043-047-051-053-067-071-270040-
OR
. OREGON COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
BENTON CLACKAMAS COLUMBIA
HOOD RIVER LINN MARION
MULTNOMAH POLK WASHINGTON
YAMHILL
WAC011-015-033-041-053-059-067-270040-
WA
. WASHINGTON COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
CLARK COWLITZ KING
LEWIS PIERCE SKAMANIA
THURSTON
THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE
REFER TO WATCH COUNTY NOTIFICATION STATEMENTS FOR OFFICIAL
INFORMATION ON COUNTIES...INDEPENDENT CITIES AND MARINE ZONES
CLEARED FROM SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AND TORNADO WATCHES.
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
WW 65 SEVERE TSTM OR WA 262210Z - 270400Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
Severe Thunderstorm Watch Number 65
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
310 PM PDT Wed Mar 26 2025
The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a
* Severe Thunderstorm Watch for portions of
Northwest Oregon
Western Washington
* Effective this Wednesday afternoon and evening from 310 PM
until 900 PM PDT.
* Primary threats include...
Scattered large hail and isolated very large hail events to 2
inches in diameter likely
Scattered damaging wind gusts to 70 mph possible
A tornado or two possible
SUMMARY...Thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon over
parts of northwest Oregon and track north-northeastward across the
watch area through early evening. Large hail and damaging wind
gusts are possible in the strongest cells.
The severe thunderstorm watch area is approximately along and 45
statute miles east and west of a line from 45 miles south of Salem
OR to 5 miles north northwest of Seattle WA. For a complete
depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update
(WOUS64 KWNS WOU5).
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
REMEMBER...A Severe Thunderstorm Watch means conditions are
favorable for severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area.
Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening
weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible
warnings. Severe thunderstorms can and occasionally do produce
tornadoes.
&&
AVIATION...A few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to
2 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 60 knots. A
few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 500. Mean storm motion vector
22030.
...Hart
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
MD 0266 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH LIKELY FOR PARTS OF WESTERN OR/WA
Mesoscale Discussion 0266
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0343 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Areas affected...Parts of western OR/WA
Concerning...Severe potential...Watch likely
Valid 262043Z - 262245Z
Probability of Watch Issuance...80 percent
SUMMARY...Supercell development is possible later this afternoon.
Large hail, isolated severe gusts, and perhaps a tornado or two will
all be possible. Watch issuance is likely.
DISCUSSION...Seasonably strong diurnal heating is underway across
western OR into southwest WA early this afternoon, with temperatures
expected to approach or exceed record highs in some areas. The 18Z
soundings from MFR and OTX depict steep lapse rates within the
850-600 mb layer, and deep-layer wind profiles supportive of
supercells. Moisture was lacking within these soundings, but surface
observations suggest somewhat more favorable moisture into parts of
western OR/WA, with dewpoints from the upper 40s to 50s F. Continued
heating will support weak to moderate destabilization with time to
the west of the Cascades, with SBCAPE potentially increasing to
near/above 1000 J/kg by late afternoon.
As an intense deep-layer cyclone well offshore of OR/WA moves
east-northeastward this afternoon, a strong mid/upper-level jet will
overspread the Pacific Northwest, further strengthening deep-layer
shear across the region. Isolated storms may initially develop near
the coastal ranges and/or the western slopes of the Cascades, with
increasing large-scale ascent supporting maintenance of storms as
they spread north-northeastward with time.
Favorable deep-layer shear will support development of a few
supercells with time. Hail to the size of golf balls or larger may
become the most prominent hazard, given the presence of elongated
hodographs, moderate buoyancy, and rather cold temperatures aloft.
Any sustained supercell could also pose some tornado threat,
especially where low-level winds are locally backed due to terrain
or storm-scale influences. Isolated strong to severe gusts may also
accompany the strongest cells/clusters. A watch will likely be
needed once storm initiation appears imminent.
..Dean/Smith.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...PDT...MFR...SEW...PQR...
LAT...LON 43312382 46132352 47112314 47712237 47672153 47052134
45492128 44312153 43612192 43032276 43312382
MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...85-115 MPH
MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...65-80 MPH
MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...1.50-2.50 IN
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
WW 0065 Status Updates
STATUS FOR WATCH 0065 HAS NOT BEEN ISSUED YET
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
No watches are valid as of Wed Mar 26 21:36:02 UTC 2025.
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 281200Z - 031200Z
Portions of the southern High Plains will continue to see fire
weather concerns heading into the late week and weekend period as a
series of upper-level disturbances move across the region.
Long-range guidance continues to show a transition to a more
active/progressive upper-level regime heading into weekend,
potentially persisting into the middle of next week. This regime
change will feature increasing precipitation chances across much of
the Intermountain West, Great Plains, and eastern U.S., but dry
conditions are expected to persist across the Southwest into the
southern High Plains. This will maintain antecedent dry fuels that
will support a fire weather threat amid increasingly wind/dry
conditions.
...D3/Friday into D5/Sunday - Southern High Plains...
Medium to long-range solutions remain consistent in depicting a
low-amplitude upper trough ejecting into the Southwest and southern
High Plains during the D3/Friday to D4/Saturday period as long-wave
troughing becomes established over the western CONUS. A westerly
downslope flow regime is anticipated both days across NM into
western TX as a surface low deepens over the High Plains and
migrates eastward in tandem with the upper feature. Elevated fire
weather conditions are expected both days with critical wind speeds
most likely on D4/Saturday as the mid-level jet overspreads southern
NM/southwest TX during peak heating. The eastward extent of
elevated/critical fire weather conditions remains uncertain and will
be conditional on the eastward progression of the dryline by late
afternoon. Similarly, rain chances across southwest TX over the next
24 hours may hinder fuel status to some degree, but ongoing drought
conditions may allow for sufficient recovery of fine fuels by
Saturday afternoon.
A second low-amplitude wave will likely pass over the Southwest on
D5/Sunday and will promote secondary lee cyclone development across
northeast NM into western TX. While spread regarding the intensity
and evolution of this secondary low remains somewhat high, ensemble
support remains sufficiently high to maintain highlights. Long-range
ECMWF deterministic solutions and ECENS guidance hints that
additional fire weather concerns are possible by the middle of next
week as a robust surface low deepens over the Plains. GFS/GEFS
solutions show zonal flow to slight ridging over the CONUS during
this period, which limits confidence in the long-range fire weather
prospects.
...D3/Friday into D4/Saturday - Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic...
Dry conditions are expected to persist across the southern
Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic region through the first half of the
weekend. Strengthening gradient winds between an offshore surface
high and an intensifying low over the Plains may result in periods
of dry/windy conditions both D3/Friday and D4/Saturday. While
confidence in critical conditions is too low for highlights, fire
weather concerns may emerge given dry fuels and active fires across
the region.
..Moore.. 03/26/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0246 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025
Valid 262000Z - 271200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS WESTERN
PORTIONS OF WASHINGTON AND OREGON...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are expected across parts of the Pacific
Northwest this afternoon and evening, with supercells possible west
of the Cascades across Oregon into Washington. These storms may
produce large hail, perhaps a tornado or two, and severe wind gusts.
...20z Update...
Only minor adjustments were needed to removed thunder across
southern OK/northern TX with this update. The Slight risk across the
Northwest and Marginal Risk in south Texas were unchanged.
Temperatures across the Portland Metro into the Columbia Gorge have
warmed into the mid 60s to 70s under mostly sunny skies. Surface
objective analysis and observed 18z soundings from MFR and OTX
continue to indicate MLCIN in place across much of the region from
the Cascades/Colombia Gorge westward. The surface front and main
upper-level forcing remain offshore and are expected to move
eastward across the region by the late afternoon/early evening.
Forecast soundings continue to indicate weakening of MLCIN along
with steepening low to mid-level lapse rates as cooling aloft with
the trough modifies profiles. This should allow for thunderstorm
development through the afternoon/evening, with potential for
supercells capable of large hail, damaging wind, and possibly a
tornado or two.
See previous discussion below for more information.
..Thornton/Smith.. 03/26/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1130 AM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025/
...Pacific Northwest...
Satellite imagery this morning shows an upper low approaching the
coast with mostly sunny skies over much of the region. A 100 kt
500-mb speed max will rotate through the base of the trough and
overspread coastal OR/WA by mid evening as the upper low shifts
east. An associated cold front should arc from off the Washington
Coast to southward along the Oregon Coast by evening.
Cold-air advection in the mid levels and diurnal heating will
contribute to steepening lapse rates, and the development of weak to
locally moderate buoyancy (250-1500 J/kg SBCAPE) by mid-late
afternoon. Strengthening large-scale forcing for ascent and
negligible CINH will favor isolated thunderstorms developing by
mid-late afternoon and increasing in coverage through the early
evening. Forecast hodographs indicate supercells are likely with
the stronger, more persistent updrafts. Large hail (1-2 inches in
diameter) will be possible. The elongated and perhaps locally
augmented hodograph in the vicinity of terrain favored areas (i.e.,
near the Columbia River with a modest easterly component) may enable
a short-duration tornado risk. Severe gusts are also possible with
the stronger cores and outflow surges as convection matures during
the evening and gradually diminishing late.
...Texas Lower Rio Grande River Valley...
A weak disturbance will approach the Rio Grande through mid
afternoon with a cirrus shield expected to persist through peak
heating. A moist boundary layer sampled by morning area raobs and
some filtered heating will promote widely scattered to scattered
storms developing this afternoon. Relatively weaker flow in the low
to mid levels will limit overall storm organization, but transient
supercell/multicells are possible. The stronger storms may be
capable of a localized hail/wind threat.
...Southwest IA...
A strengthening warm-air advection regime overnight from KS into
MO/IA will likely lead to the development of widely scattered
showers/thunderstorms in the vicinity of a warm front. Forecast
soundings show elevated instability (1000 J/kg MUCAPE) developing as
the profile moistens near 850 mb. A stronger storm capable of small
to marginally severe hail cannot be ruled out, but the threat
appears too limited to introduce low-severe probabilities.
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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