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5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0247 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 151200Z - 161200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR SOUTHERN TEXAS INTO THE EDWARDS
PLATEAU...
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR EASTERN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
PANHANDLES INTO WESTERN OKLAHOMA...
A small Critical area was introduced with this outlook across the
eastern Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles into western Oklahoma. Winds
across this region will be marginal from a Critical stand point,
however, relative humidity reductions to 10-15% seem likely to
overlap winds 10-15 mph (locally as high as 20-25 mph, gusting 20-30
mph). Given ongoing fire activity in this area and potential for
holdover fires, a Critical delineation was supported to communicate
this risk. Overnight relative humidity recovery to around 40-60
percent is forecast, however, conditions will quickly mix out
tomorrow morning with several hours of Elevated to Critical fire
weather.
Further south across north-central Texas, the Elevated was expanded
further north and eastward near the Dallas/Ft Worth metro. There is
some spread in forecast relative humidity within this region, but a
reasonable chance for relative humidity reductions to around 20-25
percent to overlap winds 15-20 mph amid dry fuels supports addition
of the Elevated into this region.
..Thornton.. 03/14/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0214 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025/
...Synopsis...
Fire weather concerns will continue across the central and southern
Plains for Saturday as gradient winds linger across KS, OK, and TX.
Early-morning water-vapor imagery depicts an upper trough digging
southward along the West Coast in the wake of a leading shortwave
trough. This wave is expected overspread the southern Plains early
Saturday with secondary cyclogenesis expected across the lower to
mid MS River Valley by late afternoon. Although the surface low will
be moving eastward away from the Plains, gradient winds behind and
ahead of a trailing cold front are expected to increase to 15-25 mph
by mid-afternoon from KS to southern TX.
...Southern TX into the Edwards Plateau...
15-25 mph westerly winds are expected across the southern half of TX
ahead of a diffuse, southward-moving cold front. Dry and
exceptionally windy conditions today (Friday) will lead to
widespread drying of fine fuels across much of central and southern
TX, which will support fire concerns for Saturday. Nearly 24 hours
of westerly downslope flow off the southern Rockies will also
promote RH reductions into the teens along the Rio Grande and across
middle and lower TX coasts. Widespread elevated conditions are
expected with a swath of critical 20-25 mph winds and 15-20% RH
likely from the San Angelo area southeastward into the south TX
Brush Country.
...Nebraska to Kansas, Oklahoma, and the TX Panhandle...
Dry conditions are expected within the post-frontal regime Saturday
afternoon as northerly winds increase to 15-20 mph. Despite an
influx of cooler temperatures, dewpoints in the single digits
coupled with limited cloud cover should promote RH reductions into
the teens to low 20s. Confidence is fairly high in the development
of elevated to critical fire weather conditions across southern NE
into KS and OK/adjacent portions of the TX Panhandle where fuels are
currently dry and supportive of fire spread. Consideration was given
to introducing a Critical risk area across western KS into northwest
OK, but rain chances over the next 24 hours may limit fuel status to
some degree. Critical risk delineations may be needed if rainfall
amounts are less than anticipated and/or if holdover fires from
lightning strikes on Friday pose a heightened fire weather concern
on Saturday given the expected dry/windy conditions.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0225 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
A few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds, and isolated, small to
marginal severe hail are possible Sunday across parts of the East.
...Southeast...
A broken to linear band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z
Sunday from parts of north FL to at least the Savannah Valley. This
activity should be in an overall weakening state, but to what degree
has above-average uncertainty. It is plausible that this activity
will have outpaced/overturned the central Gulf Coast/Deep South
instability plume with weaker downstream mid-level lapse rates
towards the South Atlantic Coast. Still, strong low-level shear will
remain coincident with at least mid 60s surface dew points to
warrant a downstream tornado/wind threat through late morning into
the afternoon. The southern portion of the convective band will
encounter diminishing/more veered low-level flow with time, deeper
in the FL Peninsula. This should result in a predominantly isolated
damaging wind threat by late afternoon.
...Mid-Atlantic States...
Low-topped convection, that may not be producing much lightning,
should be ongoing across parts of the central/southern Appalachians
vicinity at 12Z Sunday. Destabilization ahead of this activity will
likely be muted by poor mid-level lapse rates and substantially
weaker boundary-layer heating relative to the FL Peninsula. But with
very strong low-level shear/winds, some risk for damaging winds and
a couple tornadoes may be realized. The deep-layer meridional wind
profile may tend to be mostly parallel to what convection attempts
to intensify, which may temper a more widespread severe damaging
wind threat. With northeast extent, surface-based instability should
become minimal and weak convection should remain/become elevated,
limiting severe potential.
...Alleghany/Cumberland Plateau...
The level 1-MRGL risk has been expanded westward to account for
signals of a separate corridor of late morning to afternoon
convection. This may form along/ahead of the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
the central Great Lakes to Quebec. This scenario will be predicated
on sufficient boundary-layer heating, as the bulk of guidance
suggests that low-level winds will become veered ahead of the front
and yield some boundary-layer drying. This should substantially
curtail low-level shear compared to early morning, but strong
deep-layer shear could foster locally strong gusts and small to
marginally severe hail.
..Grams.. 03/14/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0225 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
A few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds, and isolated, small to
marginal severe hail are possible Sunday across parts of the East.
...Southeast...
A broken to linear band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z
Sunday from parts of north FL to at least the Savannah Valley. This
activity should be in an overall weakening state, but to what degree
has above-average uncertainty. It is plausible that this activity
will have outpaced/overturned the central Gulf Coast/Deep South
instability plume with weaker downstream mid-level lapse rates
towards the South Atlantic Coast. Still, strong low-level shear will
remain coincident with at least mid 60s surface dew points to
warrant a downstream tornado/wind threat through late morning into
the afternoon. The southern portion of the convective band will
encounter diminishing/more veered low-level flow with time, deeper
in the FL Peninsula. This should result in a predominantly isolated
damaging wind threat by late afternoon.
...Mid-Atlantic States...
Low-topped convection, that may not be producing much lightning,
should be ongoing across parts of the central/southern Appalachians
vicinity at 12Z Sunday. Destabilization ahead of this activity will
likely be muted by poor mid-level lapse rates and substantially
weaker boundary-layer heating relative to the FL Peninsula. But with
very strong low-level shear/winds, some risk for damaging winds and
a couple tornadoes may be realized. The deep-layer meridional wind
profile may tend to be mostly parallel to what convection attempts
to intensify, which may temper a more widespread severe damaging
wind threat. With northeast extent, surface-based instability should
become minimal and weak convection should remain/become elevated,
limiting severe potential.
...Alleghany/Cumberland Plateau...
The level 1-MRGL risk has been expanded westward to account for
signals of a separate corridor of late morning to afternoon
convection. This may form along/ahead of the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
the central Great Lakes to Quebec. This scenario will be predicated
on sufficient boundary-layer heating, as the bulk of guidance
suggests that low-level winds will become veered ahead of the front
and yield some boundary-layer drying. This should substantially
curtail low-level shear compared to early morning, but strong
deep-layer shear could foster locally strong gusts and small to
marginally severe hail.
..Grams.. 03/14/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0225 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
A few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds, and isolated, small to
marginal severe hail are possible Sunday across parts of the East.
...Southeast...
A broken to linear band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z
Sunday from parts of north FL to at least the Savannah Valley. This
activity should be in an overall weakening state, but to what degree
has above-average uncertainty. It is plausible that this activity
will have outpaced/overturned the central Gulf Coast/Deep South
instability plume with weaker downstream mid-level lapse rates
towards the South Atlantic Coast. Still, strong low-level shear will
remain coincident with at least mid 60s surface dew points to
warrant a downstream tornado/wind threat through late morning into
the afternoon. The southern portion of the convective band will
encounter diminishing/more veered low-level flow with time, deeper
in the FL Peninsula. This should result in a predominantly isolated
damaging wind threat by late afternoon.
...Mid-Atlantic States...
Low-topped convection, that may not be producing much lightning,
should be ongoing across parts of the central/southern Appalachians
vicinity at 12Z Sunday. Destabilization ahead of this activity will
likely be muted by poor mid-level lapse rates and substantially
weaker boundary-layer heating relative to the FL Peninsula. But with
very strong low-level shear/winds, some risk for damaging winds and
a couple tornadoes may be realized. The deep-layer meridional wind
profile may tend to be mostly parallel to what convection attempts
to intensify, which may temper a more widespread severe damaging
wind threat. With northeast extent, surface-based instability should
become minimal and weak convection should remain/become elevated,
limiting severe potential.
...Alleghany/Cumberland Plateau...
The level 1-MRGL risk has been expanded westward to account for
signals of a separate corridor of late morning to afternoon
convection. This may form along/ahead of the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
the central Great Lakes to Quebec. This scenario will be predicated
on sufficient boundary-layer heating, as the bulk of guidance
suggests that low-level winds will become veered ahead of the front
and yield some boundary-layer drying. This should substantially
curtail low-level shear compared to early morning, but strong
deep-layer shear could foster locally strong gusts and small to
marginally severe hail.
..Grams.. 03/14/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0225 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
A few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds, and isolated, small to
marginal severe hail are possible Sunday across parts of the East.
...Southeast...
A broken to linear band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z
Sunday from parts of north FL to at least the Savannah Valley. This
activity should be in an overall weakening state, but to what degree
has above-average uncertainty. It is plausible that this activity
will have outpaced/overturned the central Gulf Coast/Deep South
instability plume with weaker downstream mid-level lapse rates
towards the South Atlantic Coast. Still, strong low-level shear will
remain coincident with at least mid 60s surface dew points to
warrant a downstream tornado/wind threat through late morning into
the afternoon. The southern portion of the convective band will
encounter diminishing/more veered low-level flow with time, deeper
in the FL Peninsula. This should result in a predominantly isolated
damaging wind threat by late afternoon.
...Mid-Atlantic States...
Low-topped convection, that may not be producing much lightning,
should be ongoing across parts of the central/southern Appalachians
vicinity at 12Z Sunday. Destabilization ahead of this activity will
likely be muted by poor mid-level lapse rates and substantially
weaker boundary-layer heating relative to the FL Peninsula. But with
very strong low-level shear/winds, some risk for damaging winds and
a couple tornadoes may be realized. The deep-layer meridional wind
profile may tend to be mostly parallel to what convection attempts
to intensify, which may temper a more widespread severe damaging
wind threat. With northeast extent, surface-based instability should
become minimal and weak convection should remain/become elevated,
limiting severe potential.
...Alleghany/Cumberland Plateau...
The level 1-MRGL risk has been expanded westward to account for
signals of a separate corridor of late morning to afternoon
convection. This may form along/ahead of the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
the central Great Lakes to Quebec. This scenario will be predicated
on sufficient boundary-layer heating, as the bulk of guidance
suggests that low-level winds will become veered ahead of the front
and yield some boundary-layer drying. This should substantially
curtail low-level shear compared to early morning, but strong
deep-layer shear could foster locally strong gusts and small to
marginally severe hail.
..Grams.. 03/14/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0225 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
A few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds, and isolated, small to
marginal severe hail are possible Sunday across parts of the East.
...Southeast...
A broken to linear band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z
Sunday from parts of north FL to at least the Savannah Valley. This
activity should be in an overall weakening state, but to what degree
has above-average uncertainty. It is plausible that this activity
will have outpaced/overturned the central Gulf Coast/Deep South
instability plume with weaker downstream mid-level lapse rates
towards the South Atlantic Coast. Still, strong low-level shear will
remain coincident with at least mid 60s surface dew points to
warrant a downstream tornado/wind threat through late morning into
the afternoon. The southern portion of the convective band will
encounter diminishing/more veered low-level flow with time, deeper
in the FL Peninsula. This should result in a predominantly isolated
damaging wind threat by late afternoon.
...Mid-Atlantic States...
Low-topped convection, that may not be producing much lightning,
should be ongoing across parts of the central/southern Appalachians
vicinity at 12Z Sunday. Destabilization ahead of this activity will
likely be muted by poor mid-level lapse rates and substantially
weaker boundary-layer heating relative to the FL Peninsula. But with
very strong low-level shear/winds, some risk for damaging winds and
a couple tornadoes may be realized. The deep-layer meridional wind
profile may tend to be mostly parallel to what convection attempts
to intensify, which may temper a more widespread severe damaging
wind threat. With northeast extent, surface-based instability should
become minimal and weak convection should remain/become elevated,
limiting severe potential.
...Alleghany/Cumberland Plateau...
The level 1-MRGL risk has been expanded westward to account for
signals of a separate corridor of late morning to afternoon
convection. This may form along/ahead of the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
the central Great Lakes to Quebec. This scenario will be predicated
on sufficient boundary-layer heating, as the bulk of guidance
suggests that low-level winds will become veered ahead of the front
and yield some boundary-layer drying. This should substantially
curtail low-level shear compared to early morning, but strong
deep-layer shear could foster locally strong gusts and small to
marginally severe hail.
..Grams.. 03/14/2025
Read more
5 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0225 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...
...SUMMARY...
A few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds, and isolated, small to
marginal severe hail are possible Sunday across parts of the East.
...Southeast...
A broken to linear band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z
Sunday from parts of north FL to at least the Savannah Valley. This
activity should be in an overall weakening state, but to what degree
has above-average uncertainty. It is plausible that this activity
will have outpaced/overturned the central Gulf Coast/Deep South
instability plume with weaker downstream mid-level lapse rates
towards the South Atlantic Coast. Still, strong low-level shear will
remain coincident with at least mid 60s surface dew points to
warrant a downstream tornado/wind threat through late morning into
the afternoon. The southern portion of the convective band will
encounter diminishing/more veered low-level flow with time, deeper
in the FL Peninsula. This should result in a predominantly isolated
damaging wind threat by late afternoon.
...Mid-Atlantic States...
Low-topped convection, that may not be producing much lightning,
should be ongoing across parts of the central/southern Appalachians
vicinity at 12Z Sunday. Destabilization ahead of this activity will
likely be muted by poor mid-level lapse rates and substantially
weaker boundary-layer heating relative to the FL Peninsula. But with
very strong low-level shear/winds, some risk for damaging winds and
a couple tornadoes may be realized. The deep-layer meridional wind
profile may tend to be mostly parallel to what convection attempts
to intensify, which may temper a more widespread severe damaging
wind threat. With northeast extent, surface-based instability should
become minimal and weak convection should remain/become elevated,
limiting severe potential.
...Alleghany/Cumberland Plateau...
The level 1-MRGL risk has been expanded westward to account for
signals of a separate corridor of late morning to afternoon
convection. This may form along/ahead of the north/south-oriented
cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
the central Great Lakes to Quebec. This scenario will be predicated
on sufficient boundary-layer heating, as the bulk of guidance
suggests that low-level winds will become veered ahead of the front
and yield some boundary-layer drying. This should substantially
curtail low-level shear compared to early morning, but strong
deep-layer shear could foster locally strong gusts and small to
marginally severe hail.
..Grams.. 03/14/2025
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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