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5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1226 PM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
Sporadic damaging wind swaths and a few tornadoes will be the
primary threats from Sunday morning through dusk across a broad
portion of the East.
...FL/GA/SC...
A broken band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z Sunday from
parts of north FL into central SC. This activity should be in an
overall weakening state, as the primary surface cyclone becomes well
displaced from this region and the band outpaced/overturned the
central Gulf Coast/Deep South instability plume overnight. Still,
favorable low-level shear will linger, coincident with at least mid
60s surface dew points, to warrant a downstream wind/tornado threat
into early afternoon. The trailing portion of the convective band
will encounter further diminishing/more veered low-level flow
southward in the FL Peninsula. This should result in more of a
damaging wind/isolated hail threat deeper into the afternoon.
...NC to Mid-Atlantic States...
Lower-topped convection should be ongoing across parts of the
central/southern Appalachians vicinity at 12Z Sunday.
Destabilization ahead of this activity should be muted by weaker
mid-level lapse rates and substantially less boundary-layer heating
relative to the FL Peninsula. But with very strong low-level
shear/winds, hodographs will remain enlarged for a tornado threat.
The deep-layer meridional wind profile should tend to mostly
parallel convective bands, which may temper a more widespread
damaging wind threat. There is some signal in guidance at a
secondary round of late afternoon to early evening redevelopment
into the Piedmont with boundary-layer recovery in the wake of
early-day activity. Confidence in this scenario is low as stronger
forcing for ascent may be displaced north. As such, a broad level
2-SLGT risk for wind/tornado remains appropriate at this juncture.
...Alleghany Plateau/Upper OH Valley...
The northern portion of a thin, low-topped convective band may be
ongoing at 12Z Sunday. Low-level shear will initially be extreme
ahead of it, but surface-based instability should be scant at most
through late morning. As such, a conditional, low-probability
wind/tornado threat appears warranted. Isolated to scattered
cellular convection may form later along the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
Lake Huron into Quebec. Low-level winds will be veered ahead of the
front, substantially curtailing low-level shear compared to
mid-morning. But strong deep-layer shear and a well-mixed boundary
layer could foster locally strong gusts and small hail.
..Grams.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1226 PM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
Sporadic damaging wind swaths and a few tornadoes will be the
primary threats from Sunday morning through dusk across a broad
portion of the East.
...FL/GA/SC...
A broken band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z Sunday from
parts of north FL into central SC. This activity should be in an
overall weakening state, as the primary surface cyclone becomes well
displaced from this region and the band outpaced/overturned the
central Gulf Coast/Deep South instability plume overnight. Still,
favorable low-level shear will linger, coincident with at least mid
60s surface dew points, to warrant a downstream wind/tornado threat
into early afternoon. The trailing portion of the convective band
will encounter further diminishing/more veered low-level flow
southward in the FL Peninsula. This should result in more of a
damaging wind/isolated hail threat deeper into the afternoon.
...NC to Mid-Atlantic States...
Lower-topped convection should be ongoing across parts of the
central/southern Appalachians vicinity at 12Z Sunday.
Destabilization ahead of this activity should be muted by weaker
mid-level lapse rates and substantially less boundary-layer heating
relative to the FL Peninsula. But with very strong low-level
shear/winds, hodographs will remain enlarged for a tornado threat.
The deep-layer meridional wind profile should tend to mostly
parallel convective bands, which may temper a more widespread
damaging wind threat. There is some signal in guidance at a
secondary round of late afternoon to early evening redevelopment
into the Piedmont with boundary-layer recovery in the wake of
early-day activity. Confidence in this scenario is low as stronger
forcing for ascent may be displaced north. As such, a broad level
2-SLGT risk for wind/tornado remains appropriate at this juncture.
...Alleghany Plateau/Upper OH Valley...
The northern portion of a thin, low-topped convective band may be
ongoing at 12Z Sunday. Low-level shear will initially be extreme
ahead of it, but surface-based instability should be scant at most
through late morning. As such, a conditional, low-probability
wind/tornado threat appears warranted. Isolated to scattered
cellular convection may form later along the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
Lake Huron into Quebec. Low-level winds will be veered ahead of the
front, substantially curtailing low-level shear compared to
mid-morning. But strong deep-layer shear and a well-mixed boundary
layer could foster locally strong gusts and small hail.
..Grams.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1226 PM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
Sporadic damaging wind swaths and a few tornadoes will be the
primary threats from Sunday morning through dusk across a broad
portion of the East.
...FL/GA/SC...
A broken band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z Sunday from
parts of north FL into central SC. This activity should be in an
overall weakening state, as the primary surface cyclone becomes well
displaced from this region and the band outpaced/overturned the
central Gulf Coast/Deep South instability plume overnight. Still,
favorable low-level shear will linger, coincident with at least mid
60s surface dew points, to warrant a downstream wind/tornado threat
into early afternoon. The trailing portion of the convective band
will encounter further diminishing/more veered low-level flow
southward in the FL Peninsula. This should result in more of a
damaging wind/isolated hail threat deeper into the afternoon.
...NC to Mid-Atlantic States...
Lower-topped convection should be ongoing across parts of the
central/southern Appalachians vicinity at 12Z Sunday.
Destabilization ahead of this activity should be muted by weaker
mid-level lapse rates and substantially less boundary-layer heating
relative to the FL Peninsula. But with very strong low-level
shear/winds, hodographs will remain enlarged for a tornado threat.
The deep-layer meridional wind profile should tend to mostly
parallel convective bands, which may temper a more widespread
damaging wind threat. There is some signal in guidance at a
secondary round of late afternoon to early evening redevelopment
into the Piedmont with boundary-layer recovery in the wake of
early-day activity. Confidence in this scenario is low as stronger
forcing for ascent may be displaced north. As such, a broad level
2-SLGT risk for wind/tornado remains appropriate at this juncture.
...Alleghany Plateau/Upper OH Valley...
The northern portion of a thin, low-topped convective band may be
ongoing at 12Z Sunday. Low-level shear will initially be extreme
ahead of it, but surface-based instability should be scant at most
through late morning. As such, a conditional, low-probability
wind/tornado threat appears warranted. Isolated to scattered
cellular convection may form later along the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
Lake Huron into Quebec. Low-level winds will be veered ahead of the
front, substantially curtailing low-level shear compared to
mid-morning. But strong deep-layer shear and a well-mixed boundary
layer could foster locally strong gusts and small hail.
..Grams.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1226 PM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
Sporadic damaging wind swaths and a few tornadoes will be the
primary threats from Sunday morning through dusk across a broad
portion of the East.
...FL/GA/SC...
A broken band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z Sunday from
parts of north FL into central SC. This activity should be in an
overall weakening state, as the primary surface cyclone becomes well
displaced from this region and the band outpaced/overturned the
central Gulf Coast/Deep South instability plume overnight. Still,
favorable low-level shear will linger, coincident with at least mid
60s surface dew points, to warrant a downstream wind/tornado threat
into early afternoon. The trailing portion of the convective band
will encounter further diminishing/more veered low-level flow
southward in the FL Peninsula. This should result in more of a
damaging wind/isolated hail threat deeper into the afternoon.
...NC to Mid-Atlantic States...
Lower-topped convection should be ongoing across parts of the
central/southern Appalachians vicinity at 12Z Sunday.
Destabilization ahead of this activity should be muted by weaker
mid-level lapse rates and substantially less boundary-layer heating
relative to the FL Peninsula. But with very strong low-level
shear/winds, hodographs will remain enlarged for a tornado threat.
The deep-layer meridional wind profile should tend to mostly
parallel convective bands, which may temper a more widespread
damaging wind threat. There is some signal in guidance at a
secondary round of late afternoon to early evening redevelopment
into the Piedmont with boundary-layer recovery in the wake of
early-day activity. Confidence in this scenario is low as stronger
forcing for ascent may be displaced north. As such, a broad level
2-SLGT risk for wind/tornado remains appropriate at this juncture.
...Alleghany Plateau/Upper OH Valley...
The northern portion of a thin, low-topped convective band may be
ongoing at 12Z Sunday. Low-level shear will initially be extreme
ahead of it, but surface-based instability should be scant at most
through late morning. As such, a conditional, low-probability
wind/tornado threat appears warranted. Isolated to scattered
cellular convection may form later along the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
Lake Huron into Quebec. Low-level winds will be veered ahead of the
front, substantially curtailing low-level shear compared to
mid-morning. But strong deep-layer shear and a well-mixed boundary
layer could foster locally strong gusts and small hail.
..Grams.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1226 PM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
Sporadic damaging wind swaths and a few tornadoes will be the
primary threats from Sunday morning through dusk across a broad
portion of the East.
...FL/GA/SC...
A broken band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z Sunday from
parts of north FL into central SC. This activity should be in an
overall weakening state, as the primary surface cyclone becomes well
displaced from this region and the band outpaced/overturned the
central Gulf Coast/Deep South instability plume overnight. Still,
favorable low-level shear will linger, coincident with at least mid
60s surface dew points, to warrant a downstream wind/tornado threat
into early afternoon. The trailing portion of the convective band
will encounter further diminishing/more veered low-level flow
southward in the FL Peninsula. This should result in more of a
damaging wind/isolated hail threat deeper into the afternoon.
...NC to Mid-Atlantic States...
Lower-topped convection should be ongoing across parts of the
central/southern Appalachians vicinity at 12Z Sunday.
Destabilization ahead of this activity should be muted by weaker
mid-level lapse rates and substantially less boundary-layer heating
relative to the FL Peninsula. But with very strong low-level
shear/winds, hodographs will remain enlarged for a tornado threat.
The deep-layer meridional wind profile should tend to mostly
parallel convective bands, which may temper a more widespread
damaging wind threat. There is some signal in guidance at a
secondary round of late afternoon to early evening redevelopment
into the Piedmont with boundary-layer recovery in the wake of
early-day activity. Confidence in this scenario is low as stronger
forcing for ascent may be displaced north. As such, a broad level
2-SLGT risk for wind/tornado remains appropriate at this juncture.
...Alleghany Plateau/Upper OH Valley...
The northern portion of a thin, low-topped convective band may be
ongoing at 12Z Sunday. Low-level shear will initially be extreme
ahead of it, but surface-based instability should be scant at most
through late morning. As such, a conditional, low-probability
wind/tornado threat appears warranted. Isolated to scattered
cellular convection may form later along the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
Lake Huron into Quebec. Low-level winds will be veered ahead of the
front, substantially curtailing low-level shear compared to
mid-morning. But strong deep-layer shear and a well-mixed boundary
layer could foster locally strong gusts and small hail.
..Grams.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1226 PM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
Sporadic damaging wind swaths and a few tornadoes will be the
primary threats from Sunday morning through dusk across a broad
portion of the East.
...FL/GA/SC...
A broken band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z Sunday from
parts of north FL into central SC. This activity should be in an
overall weakening state, as the primary surface cyclone becomes well
displaced from this region and the band outpaced/overturned the
central Gulf Coast/Deep South instability plume overnight. Still,
favorable low-level shear will linger, coincident with at least mid
60s surface dew points, to warrant a downstream wind/tornado threat
into early afternoon. The trailing portion of the convective band
will encounter further diminishing/more veered low-level flow
southward in the FL Peninsula. This should result in more of a
damaging wind/isolated hail threat deeper into the afternoon.
...NC to Mid-Atlantic States...
Lower-topped convection should be ongoing across parts of the
central/southern Appalachians vicinity at 12Z Sunday.
Destabilization ahead of this activity should be muted by weaker
mid-level lapse rates and substantially less boundary-layer heating
relative to the FL Peninsula. But with very strong low-level
shear/winds, hodographs will remain enlarged for a tornado threat.
The deep-layer meridional wind profile should tend to mostly
parallel convective bands, which may temper a more widespread
damaging wind threat. There is some signal in guidance at a
secondary round of late afternoon to early evening redevelopment
into the Piedmont with boundary-layer recovery in the wake of
early-day activity. Confidence in this scenario is low as stronger
forcing for ascent may be displaced north. As such, a broad level
2-SLGT risk for wind/tornado remains appropriate at this juncture.
...Alleghany Plateau/Upper OH Valley...
The northern portion of a thin, low-topped convective band may be
ongoing at 12Z Sunday. Low-level shear will initially be extreme
ahead of it, but surface-based instability should be scant at most
through late morning. As such, a conditional, low-probability
wind/tornado threat appears warranted. Isolated to scattered
cellular convection may form later along the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
Lake Huron into Quebec. Low-level winds will be veered ahead of the
front, substantially curtailing low-level shear compared to
mid-morning. But strong deep-layer shear and a well-mixed boundary
layer could foster locally strong gusts and small hail.
..Grams.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1226 PM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
Sporadic damaging wind swaths and a few tornadoes will be the
primary threats from Sunday morning through dusk across a broad
portion of the East.
...FL/GA/SC...
A broken band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z Sunday from
parts of north FL into central SC. This activity should be in an
overall weakening state, as the primary surface cyclone becomes well
displaced from this region and the band outpaced/overturned the
central Gulf Coast/Deep South instability plume overnight. Still,
favorable low-level shear will linger, coincident with at least mid
60s surface dew points, to warrant a downstream wind/tornado threat
into early afternoon. The trailing portion of the convective band
will encounter further diminishing/more veered low-level flow
southward in the FL Peninsula. This should result in more of a
damaging wind/isolated hail threat deeper into the afternoon.
...NC to Mid-Atlantic States...
Lower-topped convection should be ongoing across parts of the
central/southern Appalachians vicinity at 12Z Sunday.
Destabilization ahead of this activity should be muted by weaker
mid-level lapse rates and substantially less boundary-layer heating
relative to the FL Peninsula. But with very strong low-level
shear/winds, hodographs will remain enlarged for a tornado threat.
The deep-layer meridional wind profile should tend to mostly
parallel convective bands, which may temper a more widespread
damaging wind threat. There is some signal in guidance at a
secondary round of late afternoon to early evening redevelopment
into the Piedmont with boundary-layer recovery in the wake of
early-day activity. Confidence in this scenario is low as stronger
forcing for ascent may be displaced north. As such, a broad level
2-SLGT risk for wind/tornado remains appropriate at this juncture.
...Alleghany Plateau/Upper OH Valley...
The northern portion of a thin, low-topped convective band may be
ongoing at 12Z Sunday. Low-level shear will initially be extreme
ahead of it, but surface-based instability should be scant at most
through late morning. As such, a conditional, low-probability
wind/tornado threat appears warranted. Isolated to scattered
cellular convection may form later along the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
Lake Huron into Quebec. Low-level winds will be veered ahead of the
front, substantially curtailing low-level shear compared to
mid-morning. But strong deep-layer shear and a well-mixed boundary
layer could foster locally strong gusts and small hail.
..Grams.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0046 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 8
THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA.
..LYONS..02/15/25
ATTN...WFO...LZK...JAN...SHV...MEG...LCH...
STATUS REPORT FOR WT 8
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
ARC001-003-011-013-017-025-027-035-037-041-043-069-077-079-095-
103-107-117-123-139-147-152340-
AR
. ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
ARKANSAS ASHLEY BRADLEY
CALHOUN CHICOT CLEVELAND
COLUMBIA CRITTENDEN CROSS
DESHA DREW JEFFERSON
LEE LINCOLN MONROE
OUACHITA PHILLIPS PRAIRIE
ST. FRANCIS UNION WOODRUFF
LAC009-013-015-017-021-025-027-029-031-035-041-043-049-059-061-
065-067-069-073-079-081-083-085-107-111-115-119-123-127-
152340-
LA
. LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE
AVOYELLES BIENVILLE BOSSIER
CADDO CALDWELL CATAHOULA
CLAIBORNE CONCORDIA DE SOTO
EAST CARROLL FRANKLIN GRANT
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0045 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 45
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 SSW LCH
TO 30 ESE ESF TO 30 SSW GLH.
..LYONS..03/15/25
ATTN...WFO...LIX...JAN...MEG...
STATUS REPORT FOR WT 45
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
LAC005-029-033-035-037-047-063-065-077-091-093-095-103-105-107-
117-121-125-151840-
LA
. LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE
ASCENSION CONCORDIA EAST BATON ROUGE
EAST CARROLL EAST FELICIANA IBERVILLE
LIVINGSTON MADISON POINTE COUPEE
ST. HELENA ST. JAMES ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
ST. TAMMANY TANGIPAHOA TENSAS
WASHINGTON WEST BATON ROUGE WEST FELICIANA
MSC001-003-005-007-009-013-015-017-019-021-023-025-029-031-035-
037-043-049-051-053-055-057-061-063-065-067-069-071-073-075-077-
079-081-083-085-087-089-091-095-097-099-101-103-105-109-113-115-
117-121-123-125-127-129-135-139-141-145-147-149-155-157-159-161-
163-151840-
MS
. MISSISSIPPI COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
ADAMS ALCORN AMITE
ATTALA BENTON CALHOUN
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0044 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 40 ESE MLU
TO 15 ENE MEM.
..LYONS..03/15/25
ATTN...WFO...JAN...LZK...SHV...LCH...MEG...
STATUS REPORT FOR WT 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
LAC009-069-079-151840-
LA
. LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE
AVOYELLES NATCHITOCHES RAPIDES
MSC093-107-151840-
MS
. MISSISSIPPI COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
MARSHALL PANOLA
TNC069-071-109-151840-
TN
. TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
HARDEMAN HARDIN MCNAIRY
THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0044 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 40 ESE MLU
TO 15 ENE MEM.
..LYONS..03/15/25
ATTN...WFO...JAN...LZK...SHV...LCH...MEG...
STATUS REPORT FOR WT 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
LAC009-069-079-151840-
LA
. LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE
AVOYELLES NATCHITOCHES RAPIDES
MSC093-107-151840-
MS
. MISSISSIPPI COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
MARSHALL PANOLA
TNC069-071-109-151840-
TN
. TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
HARDEMAN HARDIN MCNAIRY
THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0044 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 40 ESE MLU
TO 15 ENE MEM.
..LYONS..03/15/25
ATTN...WFO...JAN...LZK...SHV...LCH...MEG...
STATUS REPORT FOR WT 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
LAC009-069-079-151840-
LA
. LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE
AVOYELLES NATCHITOCHES RAPIDES
MSC093-107-151840-
MS
. MISSISSIPPI COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
MARSHALL PANOLA
TNC069-071-109-151840-
TN
. TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
HARDEMAN HARDIN MCNAIRY
THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0044 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 40 ESE MLU
TO 15 ENE MEM.
..LYONS..03/15/25
ATTN...WFO...JAN...LZK...SHV...LCH...MEG...
STATUS REPORT FOR WT 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
LAC009-069-079-151840-
LA
. LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE
AVOYELLES NATCHITOCHES RAPIDES
MSC093-107-151840-
MS
. MISSISSIPPI COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
MARSHALL PANOLA
TNC069-071-109-151840-
TN
. TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
HARDEMAN HARDIN MCNAIRY
THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0044 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 40 ESE MLU
TO 15 ENE MEM.
..LYONS..03/15/25
ATTN...WFO...JAN...LZK...SHV...LCH...MEG...
STATUS REPORT FOR WT 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
LAC009-069-079-151840-
LA
. LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE
AVOYELLES NATCHITOCHES RAPIDES
MSC093-107-151840-
MS
. MISSISSIPPI COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
MARSHALL PANOLA
TNC069-071-109-151840-
TN
. TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
HARDEMAN HARDIN MCNAIRY
THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0044 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 40 ESE MLU
TO 15 ENE MEM.
..LYONS..03/15/25
ATTN...WFO...JAN...LZK...SHV...LCH...MEG...
STATUS REPORT FOR WT 44
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
LAC009-069-079-151840-
LA
. LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE
AVOYELLES NATCHITOCHES RAPIDES
MSC093-107-151840-
MS
. MISSISSIPPI COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
MARSHALL PANOLA
TNC069-071-109-151840-
TN
. TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
HARDEMAN HARDIN MCNAIRY
THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
WW 44 TORNADO AR LA MS TN 151055Z - 151800Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
Tornado Watch Number 44
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
555 AM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a
* Tornado Watch for portions of
Southeast Arkansas
Northern and central Louisiana
Northern Mississippi
Southwest Tennessee
* Effective this Saturday morning and afternoon from 555 AM until
100 PM CDT.
* Primary threats include...
A few tornadoes and a couple intense tornadoes likely
Scattered damaging winds and isolated significant gusts to 75
mph likely
Scattered large hail and isolated very large hail events to 2.5
inches in diameter likely
SUMMARY...Thunderstorms will increase in coverage and intensity in
an extensive band from northern Louisiana to southeast Arkansas,
northern Mississippi and southwest Tennessee through the morning.
The storm environment will become more favorable for tornadic
supercells with time, including the potential for a few strong
(EF2-EF3) tornadoes later this morning. Otherwise, large hail of
1.5-2.5 inches in diameter and thunderstorm gusts of 60-75 mph will
also be possible.
The tornado watch area is approximately along and 65 statute miles
north and south of a line from 45 miles west northwest of
Natchitoches LA to 35 miles northeast of Tupelo MS. For a complete
depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update
(WOUS64 KWNS WOU4).
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
REMEMBER...A Tornado Watch means conditions are favorable for
tornadoes and 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.
&&
OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 41...WW 42...WW 43...
AVIATION...Tornadoes and a few severe thunderstorms with hail
surface and aloft to 2.5 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind
gusts to 65 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 500. Mean
storm motion vector 24045.
...Thompson
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
MD 0199 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...TORNADO WATCH LIKELY FOR EASTERN LOUISIANA AND MUCH OF MISSISSIPPI
Mesoscale Discussion 0199
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1007 AM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Areas affected...Eastern Louisiana and much of Mississippi
Concerning...Severe potential...Tornado Watch likely
Valid 151507Z - 151700Z
Probability of Watch Issuance...95 percent
SUMMARY...A Particularly Dangerous Situation Tornado Watch will be
issued soon. A tornado outbreak with multiple intense to violent
long-track tornadoes is likely.
DISCUSSION...Morning observational data continues to support a
likely tornado outbreak today across parts of eastern Louisiana and
Mississippi. 12Z RAOBS from LCH and LIX indicate rich low-level
moisture featuring a mean mixing ratio of 14 to 15 beneath a steep
EML with mid-level lapse rates of 8 to nearly 9 C/km. This
thermodynamic profile, combined with broken cloud cover across
Louisiana and southern Mississippi suggest substantial heating will
occur and strong instability will be present for much of the day
today. The EML will play a critical role in the storm mode today.
Discrete supercells are anticipated given the EML which will
suppress more widespread convection and also provide enough
mid-level dry air for potentially multiple well-organized supercells
in close proximity through the day. In addition, 12Z RAOB data along
the Gulf Coast is consistent with the data observed the morning of
historical tornado outbreaks across Mississippi and Alabama.
Strong shear is already present across Louisiana and Mississippi
this morning with effective shear 40 to 60 knots at the LIX/LCH/JAN
12Z RAOBs. However, shear will increase further through the morning
as mid-level flow strengthens with the mid-level jet streak
overspreading more of the warm sector and with secondary surface
cyclogenesis in the mid-Mississippi Valley. Early evidence of this
secondary low-pressure center has already been observed with a
sub-995mb surface low analyzed northwest of Little Rock, Arkansas at
15Z. This surface low will continue to deepen and consolidate
through the day which will keep flow backed across the warm sector
and result in further strengthening of the already strong low-level
jet. By mid-afternoon, a low-level jet of 65 to 70 knots is forecast
with corresponding 0-1km SRH of 300 to 500 m2/s2. The presence of
nearly pure streamwise vorticity in the lowest 1km will create an
environment extremely conducive to the stretching of the ambient
low-level vorticity.
Confluence bands across Louisiana this morning likely represent the
initial supercell initiation zone for the storms of greatest concern
this afternoon. Multiple bands of supercells are possible. Once
mature supercells develop in the environment south of the messier
convection, there should be very little to interrupt their longevity
through the afternoon.
Given the aforementioned factors, many discrete supercells are
expected in an environment which is extremely conducive to tornadic
activity. Therefore, a tornado outbreak appears imminent with the
potential for multiple, intense to violent long track tornadoes from
mid-day through this evening across eastern Louisiana and much of
Mississippi. A Particularly Dangerous Situation Tornado Watch will
be issued soon to address this threat.
..Bentley/Gleason.. 03/15/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...BMX...HUN...MOB...MEG...JAN...LIX...LCH...SHV...
LAT...LON 33289093 33959023 34478950 34728889 34648832 34558813
33698827 31718846 31238894 30768995 30779104 31009190
31559220 32039197 32649162 33289093
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 151630Z - 161200Z
...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
MISSISSIPPI AND ALABAMA...
...SUMMARY...
A tornado outbreak is expected today across the central Gulf Coast
States and Deep South into the Tennessee Valley. Numerous
significant tornadoes, some of which should be long-track and
potentially violent, are expected this afternoon and evening. The
most dangerous tornado threat will begin across eastern Louisiana
and Mississippi through this afternoon, spread across Alabama this
afternoon into the evening, and reach western parts of the Florida
Panhandle and Georgia tonight.
...Southeast into the Tennessee Valley...
No changes have been made to the High Risk area across the
Southeast. Multiple supercells are ongoing late this morning across
southeast LA into MS, along and east of a convectively reinforced
baroclinic zone. A very favorable parameter space exists across the
Southeast for severe thunderstorms, which will likely help maintain
ongoing supercells and small line segments. Current expectations are
for the most favorable strong to intense tornado environment to
continue across MS this afternoon and evening, with moderate
instability and ample low-level and deep-layer shear already in
place. The tornado threat will spread eastward into AL and southern
TN this afternoon and evening, and eventually into parts of the FL
Panhandle, western/central GA, and eastern TN overnight in tandem
with an ejecting southern-stream shortwave trough and related
intense low-level jet. Both large hail and severe/damaging winds
will also be a threat with these supercells. Upscale growth into one
or more bowing line segments will be possible, especially with
northward extent into the TN Valley and eastward into GA, where
potentially numerous to widespread severe/damaging winds may occur.
Reference Mesoscale Discussions 199, 200, and 201 for more
information on the near-term severe threat across the Southeast.
...Southern Appalachians...
As an upper trough pivots east into the region late tonight, strong
low-level warm/moist advection will contribute to a gradually
destabilizing airmass. Despite weaker buoyancy with eastward extent
over northeast GA into the western Carolinas, very intense low to
mid-level flow will aid in maintaining a risk for a few supercells
and line segments into a more limited thermodynamic environment.
This will potentially yield a risk for damaging gusts and an
isolated tornado threat through early Sunday morning.
...Ohio Valley into Southern Great Lakes...
Guidance maintains a belt of strong 850 mb flow through midday,
before an intensification of the northern periphery of a low-level
jet extending from the central Gulf Coast into the Mid South
overspreads the region. Uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude
of destabilization behind earlier convective activity, and its
resultant effects on severe potential. Most guidance generally shows
only weak buoyancy (at or below 500 J/kg of MUCAPE), but some
airmass recovery in the wake of earlier thunderstorms may occur over
IN into OH and vicinity.
..Gleason/Squitieri.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 151630Z - 161200Z
...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
MISSISSIPPI AND ALABAMA...
...SUMMARY...
A tornado outbreak is expected today across the central Gulf Coast
States and Deep South into the Tennessee Valley. Numerous
significant tornadoes, some of which should be long-track and
potentially violent, are expected this afternoon and evening. The
most dangerous tornado threat will begin across eastern Louisiana
and Mississippi through this afternoon, spread across Alabama this
afternoon into the evening, and reach western parts of the Florida
Panhandle and Georgia tonight.
...Southeast into the Tennessee Valley...
No changes have been made to the High Risk area across the
Southeast. Multiple supercells are ongoing late this morning across
southeast LA into MS, along and east of a convectively reinforced
baroclinic zone. A very favorable parameter space exists across the
Southeast for severe thunderstorms, which will likely help maintain
ongoing supercells and small line segments. Current expectations are
for the most favorable strong to intense tornado environment to
continue across MS this afternoon and evening, with moderate
instability and ample low-level and deep-layer shear already in
place. The tornado threat will spread eastward into AL and southern
TN this afternoon and evening, and eventually into parts of the FL
Panhandle, western/central GA, and eastern TN overnight in tandem
with an ejecting southern-stream shortwave trough and related
intense low-level jet. Both large hail and severe/damaging winds
will also be a threat with these supercells. Upscale growth into one
or more bowing line segments will be possible, especially with
northward extent into the TN Valley and eastward into GA, where
potentially numerous to widespread severe/damaging winds may occur.
Reference Mesoscale Discussions 199, 200, and 201 for more
information on the near-term severe threat across the Southeast.
...Southern Appalachians...
As an upper trough pivots east into the region late tonight, strong
low-level warm/moist advection will contribute to a gradually
destabilizing airmass. Despite weaker buoyancy with eastward extent
over northeast GA into the western Carolinas, very intense low to
mid-level flow will aid in maintaining a risk for a few supercells
and line segments into a more limited thermodynamic environment.
This will potentially yield a risk for damaging gusts and an
isolated tornado threat through early Sunday morning.
...Ohio Valley into Southern Great Lakes...
Guidance maintains a belt of strong 850 mb flow through midday,
before an intensification of the northern periphery of a low-level
jet extending from the central Gulf Coast into the Mid South
overspreads the region. Uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude
of destabilization behind earlier convective activity, and its
resultant effects on severe potential. Most guidance generally shows
only weak buoyancy (at or below 500 J/kg of MUCAPE), but some
airmass recovery in the wake of earlier thunderstorms may occur over
IN into OH and vicinity.
..Gleason/Squitieri.. 03/15/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025
Valid 151630Z - 161200Z
...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
MISSISSIPPI AND ALABAMA...
...SUMMARY...
A tornado outbreak is expected today across the central Gulf Coast
States and Deep South into the Tennessee Valley. Numerous
significant tornadoes, some of which should be long-track and
potentially violent, are expected this afternoon and evening. The
most dangerous tornado threat will begin across eastern Louisiana
and Mississippi through this afternoon, spread across Alabama this
afternoon into the evening, and reach western parts of the Florida
Panhandle and Georgia tonight.
...Southeast into the Tennessee Valley...
No changes have been made to the High Risk area across the
Southeast. Multiple supercells are ongoing late this morning across
southeast LA into MS, along and east of a convectively reinforced
baroclinic zone. A very favorable parameter space exists across the
Southeast for severe thunderstorms, which will likely help maintain
ongoing supercells and small line segments. Current expectations are
for the most favorable strong to intense tornado environment to
continue across MS this afternoon and evening, with moderate
instability and ample low-level and deep-layer shear already in
place. The tornado threat will spread eastward into AL and southern
TN this afternoon and evening, and eventually into parts of the FL
Panhandle, western/central GA, and eastern TN overnight in tandem
with an ejecting southern-stream shortwave trough and related
intense low-level jet. Both large hail and severe/damaging winds
will also be a threat with these supercells. Upscale growth into one
or more bowing line segments will be possible, especially with
northward extent into the TN Valley and eastward into GA, where
potentially numerous to widespread severe/damaging winds may occur.
Reference Mesoscale Discussions 199, 200, and 201 for more
information on the near-term severe threat across the Southeast.
...Southern Appalachians...
As an upper trough pivots east into the region late tonight, strong
low-level warm/moist advection will contribute to a gradually
destabilizing airmass. Despite weaker buoyancy with eastward extent
over northeast GA into the western Carolinas, very intense low to
mid-level flow will aid in maintaining a risk for a few supercells
and line segments into a more limited thermodynamic environment.
This will potentially yield a risk for damaging gusts and an
isolated tornado threat through early Sunday morning.
...Ohio Valley into Southern Great Lakes...
Guidance maintains a belt of strong 850 mb flow through midday,
before an intensification of the northern periphery of a low-level
jet extending from the central Gulf Coast into the Mid South
overspreads the region. Uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude
of destabilization behind earlier convective activity, and its
resultant effects on severe potential. Most guidance generally shows
only weak buoyancy (at or below 500 J/kg of MUCAPE), but some
airmass recovery in the wake of earlier thunderstorms may occur over
IN into OH and vicinity.
..Gleason/Squitieri.. 03/15/2025
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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