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3 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0109 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast remains on track with no changes needed.
Latest forecast guidance continues to suggest fire weather potential
will be limited across the country. Locally elevated conditions
remain possible across southeast ID and adjacent portions of
northern UT as well as the southern High Plains, but only modestly
dry fuels and rain/thunderstorm chances should mitigate fire
concerns for these regions (respectively). See the previous
discussion below for additional details.
..Moore.. 06/01/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1259 AM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025/
...Synopsis...
The main portion of cyclonic flow aloft will stay within the
northern tier of the CONUS. The upper cyclone in the Southwest will
continue east into the southern High Plains. Off the southern
California coast, another upper cyclone will slowly drift
southeastward. A surface front will push into the central/southern
Great Basin.
Fire weather concerns for most areas should remain low.
Thunderstorms are probable in the Southwest, but PW values will be
high enough to mitigate lightning ignition concerns. Dry
northwesterly winds are possible in parts of the northern Great
Basin. Locally elevated conditions are possible, but fuels are only
marginally receptive currently and winds will also be marginal. With
a surface low moving into northern California, dry northerly winds
could reach 15-20 mph during the morning in parts of the Sacramento
Valley. Fuels are only starting to cure and the strongest winds will
be offset from the lowest RH. Locally elevated conditions are
possible, however.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0109 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast remains on track with no changes needed.
Latest forecast guidance continues to suggest fire weather potential
will be limited across the country. Locally elevated conditions
remain possible across southeast ID and adjacent portions of
northern UT as well as the southern High Plains, but only modestly
dry fuels and rain/thunderstorm chances should mitigate fire
concerns for these regions (respectively). See the previous
discussion below for additional details.
..Moore.. 06/01/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1259 AM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025/
...Synopsis...
The main portion of cyclonic flow aloft will stay within the
northern tier of the CONUS. The upper cyclone in the Southwest will
continue east into the southern High Plains. Off the southern
California coast, another upper cyclone will slowly drift
southeastward. A surface front will push into the central/southern
Great Basin.
Fire weather concerns for most areas should remain low.
Thunderstorms are probable in the Southwest, but PW values will be
high enough to mitigate lightning ignition concerns. Dry
northwesterly winds are possible in parts of the northern Great
Basin. Locally elevated conditions are possible, but fuels are only
marginally receptive currently and winds will also be marginal. With
a surface low moving into northern California, dry northerly winds
could reach 15-20 mph during the morning in parts of the Sacramento
Valley. Fuels are only starting to cure and the strongest winds will
be offset from the lowest RH. Locally elevated conditions are
possible, however.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0109 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast remains on track with no changes needed.
Latest forecast guidance continues to suggest fire weather potential
will be limited across the country. Locally elevated conditions
remain possible across southeast ID and adjacent portions of
northern UT as well as the southern High Plains, but only modestly
dry fuels and rain/thunderstorm chances should mitigate fire
concerns for these regions (respectively). See the previous
discussion below for additional details.
..Moore.. 06/01/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1259 AM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025/
...Synopsis...
The main portion of cyclonic flow aloft will stay within the
northern tier of the CONUS. The upper cyclone in the Southwest will
continue east into the southern High Plains. Off the southern
California coast, another upper cyclone will slowly drift
southeastward. A surface front will push into the central/southern
Great Basin.
Fire weather concerns for most areas should remain low.
Thunderstorms are probable in the Southwest, but PW values will be
high enough to mitigate lightning ignition concerns. Dry
northwesterly winds are possible in parts of the northern Great
Basin. Locally elevated conditions are possible, but fuels are only
marginally receptive currently and winds will also be marginal. With
a surface low moving into northern California, dry northerly winds
could reach 15-20 mph during the morning in parts of the Sacramento
Valley. Fuels are only starting to cure and the strongest winds will
be offset from the lowest RH. Locally elevated conditions are
possible, however.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0109 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast remains on track with no changes needed.
Latest forecast guidance continues to suggest fire weather potential
will be limited across the country. Locally elevated conditions
remain possible across southeast ID and adjacent portions of
northern UT as well as the southern High Plains, but only modestly
dry fuels and rain/thunderstorm chances should mitigate fire
concerns for these regions (respectively). See the previous
discussion below for additional details.
..Moore.. 06/01/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1259 AM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025/
...Synopsis...
The main portion of cyclonic flow aloft will stay within the
northern tier of the CONUS. The upper cyclone in the Southwest will
continue east into the southern High Plains. Off the southern
California coast, another upper cyclone will slowly drift
southeastward. A surface front will push into the central/southern
Great Basin.
Fire weather concerns for most areas should remain low.
Thunderstorms are probable in the Southwest, but PW values will be
high enough to mitigate lightning ignition concerns. Dry
northwesterly winds are possible in parts of the northern Great
Basin. Locally elevated conditions are possible, but fuels are only
marginally receptive currently and winds will also be marginal. With
a surface low moving into northern California, dry northerly winds
could reach 15-20 mph during the morning in parts of the Sacramento
Valley. Fuels are only starting to cure and the strongest winds will
be offset from the lowest RH. Locally elevated conditions are
possible, however.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
No watches are valid as of Sun Jun 1 18:12:02 UTC 2025.
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1220 PM CDT Sun Jun 01 2025
Valid 021200Z - 031200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and
southern High Plains into the northern Great Plains during the late
afternoon and evening on Monday. Severe gusts and large hail are the
expected hazards.
...Synopsis...
An upper-level split flow regime on Monday will be characterized by
a northern stream shortwave trough moving from the northern Rockies
to the northern Plains, while a southern stream shortwave trough
develops east from the Southwest into the southern/central High
Plains. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure will
modestly deepen over the central Plains, with a lee trough extending
southward across the southern High Plains. A cold front also will be
oriented northeast to southwest from northern MN into northeast CO
by 00z. The front will develop southeast into Tuesday morning across
the Upper Midwest and central Plains. Both the surface cold front
and the southern High Plains lee trough will focus thunderstorm
activity during the afternoon/evening.
...NE/CO/WY border area to western MN...
Moderate to strong instability is expected to develop along a
somewhat narrow corridor ahead of the southeast-advancing cold front
during the afternoon. Southwesterly flow aloft will modestly
increase into the evening as height falls overspread the region.
Strong heating will promote a deeply mixed boundary amid low to mid
60s F dewpoints ahead of the front (lower dewpoints expected further
west across CO/WY/NE border area). Initial thunderstorms are likely
to develop in an upslope flow regime across the CO/WY/NE border
vicinity. High-based supercells capable of severe gusts and hail
will be possible.
Additional storm development is likely later in the afternoon into
the evening along the cold front from central NE into MN. The
stronger southwesterly flow aloft is forecast to lag behind the
front, and developing convection may quickly move to the cool side
of the boundary given boundary-parallel wind profiles. This will
likely result in multicell clusters/linear segments capable of
producing damaging gusts and large hail in stronger embedded cores.
Instability will decrease with increasing inhibition with eastward
extent during the evening and severe potential should wane after
03-06z.
...KS to the southern High Plains...
Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected to develop over NM/CO
in a drier and modestly unstable airmass compared to further east,
but aided by steep lapse rates and several impulses ejecting across
the southern Rockies ahead of the main upper shortwave trough.
Strong outflow winds and hail may occur with this activity as it
spreads east across the High Plains. This activity will encounter a
corridor of deeper boundary-layer moisture and strong instability
from western KS into parts of the Panhandles and western OK toward
late afternoon/early evening. At the same time, a low-level jet will
be increasing over the southern Plains. As a result, some
organization/consolidation of thunderstorm clusters into bowing
segments will be possible. This may result in a short window of
increased severe gust potential across portions of western KS into
western OK. The eastward extent of severe potential will likely be
limited across central KS/OK and points east due to modest vertical
shear, and as inhibition increases in the 03-06z time frame.
..Leitman.. 06/01/2025
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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