SPC Jul 21, 2025 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0353 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 241200Z - 291200Z ...DISCUSSION... Medium-range models indicate that mid-level ridging, initially centered over the Ohio Valley, will weaken late this work week through next weekend, as flow undergoes substantive amplification upstream. This appears likely to include a significant short wave trough digging southeast of the Aleutians, accompanied by lower/mid-tropospheric cyclogenesis across the northeastern Pacific. Part of a higher latitude blocking pattern, little subsequent movement of this cyclone is forecast through early next week, as an expansive, prominent mid-level ridge also evolves in the downstream lower latitudes, across much of the Intermountain West, Rockies and Great Plains into mid and lower Mississippi Valley. However, as a notable mid-level low continues slowly east of Hudson Bay, across northern Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador, a belt of seasonably strong westerly mid/upper flow may be maintained across Ontario and Quebec this Thursday through Friday. Along the favorably sheared southern fringe of this regime, seasonably moist low-level air advecting ahead of a stalled to southward advancing frontal zone may contribute to sufficient destabilization for the evolution of organizing thunderstorm clusters capable of producing swaths of damaging wind gusts. The extent to which this may impact U.S. portions of the Great Lakes into New England remains unclear. It might not be out of the question that a similar type regime could evolve beneath developing northwesterly mid-level flow, from the North Dakota/Minnesota international border area into the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes late next weekend into early next week. Current guidance is still suggestive that this is a lower probability, but this could be due to the low predictability of the pertinent features at this extended range. Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0730 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0229 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WEDNESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF EAST CENTRAL MINNESOTA...NORTHERN AND CENTRAL WISCONSIN AND UPPER MICHIGAN... ...SUMMARY... One or two organizing clusters of storms posing a risk for severe wind and perhaps some hail are possible across parts of the Upper Midwest into adjacent Great Lakes region Wednesday through Wednesday night. ...Discussion... Models indicate some further suppression of the northeastern Pacific mid-level ridging, with flow becoming more zonal and progressive across the British Columbia coast into the Canadian Prairies during this period. A lingering short wave perturbation emerging from the northern U.S. intermountain region may accelerate east of the Montana Rockies, along the central Canadian/U.S. border. This appears likely to be preceded by more subtle smaller-scale impulses migrating around the northern periphery of persistent mid-level ridging centered over the Ohio Valley. It appears that these will accelerate into the southern fringe of strengthening mid-level westerly flow across parts of the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes region into Ontario and Quebec, between the mid-level ridge and a significant mid-level trough/cyclone migrating slowly across Hudson Bay. While a cold front trailing the surface cyclone may continue to advance southward through the Great Plains to the lee of the Rockies, models suggest that it probably will stall across parts of the Upper Midwest into adjacent Great Lakes Wednesday into Wednesday night, near the northern periphery of the mid-level ridge. ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes... It appears that a seasonably moist boundary layer (including dew points around or above 70F) advecting into the region during the day Wednesday, if not earlier, will become supportive of moderate to strong potential instability beneath a remnant plume of modestly steep lower/mid-tropospheric lapse rates. Models suggest that this will generally focus along the stalling surface front, where 30-40 kt west-southwesterly flow in the 700-500 mb layer will contribute to the possible evolution of organizing, eastward propagating convective systems with the potential to produce strong to severe surface gusts. There appears a general signal within the model output that a stalling, trailing flank of outflow associated with an initial cluster of storms may become a focus for renewed convective development, near where it intersects the front, just ahead of an eastward migrating frontal wave, across northern Wisconsin into Upper Michigan during the peak late afternoon into evening instability. ...Lee of northern Rockies into Front Range... In the presence of steep lapse rates, moistening easterly to southeasterly near-surface flow, beneath modest westerly flow aloft, may contribute to sufficient destabilization and shear to support widely scattered strong to severe storms. This may include evolving supercells near/just east of the higher terrain late Wednesday afternoon and evening. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0730 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0229 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WEDNESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF EAST CENTRAL MINNESOTA...NORTHERN AND CENTRAL WISCONSIN AND UPPER MICHIGAN... ...SUMMARY... One or two organizing clusters of storms posing a risk for severe wind and perhaps some hail are possible across parts of the Upper Midwest into adjacent Great Lakes region Wednesday through Wednesday night. ...Discussion... Models indicate some further suppression of the northeastern Pacific mid-level ridging, with flow becoming more zonal and progressive across the British Columbia coast into the Canadian Prairies during this period. A lingering short wave perturbation emerging from the northern U.S. intermountain region may accelerate east of the Montana Rockies, along the central Canadian/U.S. border. This appears likely to be preceded by more subtle smaller-scale impulses migrating around the northern periphery of persistent mid-level ridging centered over the Ohio Valley. It appears that these will accelerate into the southern fringe of strengthening mid-level westerly flow across parts of the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes region into Ontario and Quebec, between the mid-level ridge and a significant mid-level trough/cyclone migrating slowly across Hudson Bay. While a cold front trailing the surface cyclone may continue to advance southward through the Great Plains to the lee of the Rockies, models suggest that it probably will stall across parts of the Upper Midwest into adjacent Great Lakes Wednesday into Wednesday night, near the northern periphery of the mid-level ridge. ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes... It appears that a seasonably moist boundary layer (including dew points around or above 70F) advecting into the region during the day Wednesday, if not earlier, will become supportive of moderate to strong potential instability beneath a remnant plume of modestly steep lower/mid-tropospheric lapse rates. Models suggest that this will generally focus along the stalling surface front, where 30-40 kt west-southwesterly flow in the 700-500 mb layer will contribute to the possible evolution of organizing, eastward propagating convective systems with the potential to produce strong to severe surface gusts. There appears a general signal within the model output that a stalling, trailing flank of outflow associated with an initial cluster of storms may become a focus for renewed convective development, near where it intersects the front, just ahead of an eastward migrating frontal wave, across northern Wisconsin into Upper Michigan during the peak late afternoon into evening instability. ...Lee of northern Rockies into Front Range... In the presence of steep lapse rates, moistening easterly to southeasterly near-surface flow, beneath modest westerly flow aloft, may contribute to sufficient destabilization and shear to support widely scattered strong to severe storms. This may include evolving supercells near/just east of the higher terrain late Wednesday afternoon and evening. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0730 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0229 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WEDNESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF EAST CENTRAL MINNESOTA...NORTHERN AND CENTRAL WISCONSIN AND UPPER MICHIGAN... ...SUMMARY... One or two organizing clusters of storms posing a risk for severe wind and perhaps some hail are possible across parts of the Upper Midwest into adjacent Great Lakes region Wednesday through Wednesday night. ...Discussion... Models indicate some further suppression of the northeastern Pacific mid-level ridging, with flow becoming more zonal and progressive across the British Columbia coast into the Canadian Prairies during this period. A lingering short wave perturbation emerging from the northern U.S. intermountain region may accelerate east of the Montana Rockies, along the central Canadian/U.S. border. This appears likely to be preceded by more subtle smaller-scale impulses migrating around the northern periphery of persistent mid-level ridging centered over the Ohio Valley. It appears that these will accelerate into the southern fringe of strengthening mid-level westerly flow across parts of the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes region into Ontario and Quebec, between the mid-level ridge and a significant mid-level trough/cyclone migrating slowly across Hudson Bay. While a cold front trailing the surface cyclone may continue to advance southward through the Great Plains to the lee of the Rockies, models suggest that it probably will stall across parts of the Upper Midwest into adjacent Great Lakes Wednesday into Wednesday night, near the northern periphery of the mid-level ridge. ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes... It appears that a seasonably moist boundary layer (including dew points around or above 70F) advecting into the region during the day Wednesday, if not earlier, will become supportive of moderate to strong potential instability beneath a remnant plume of modestly steep lower/mid-tropospheric lapse rates. Models suggest that this will generally focus along the stalling surface front, where 30-40 kt west-southwesterly flow in the 700-500 mb layer will contribute to the possible evolution of organizing, eastward propagating convective systems with the potential to produce strong to severe surface gusts. There appears a general signal within the model output that a stalling, trailing flank of outflow associated with an initial cluster of storms may become a focus for renewed convective development, near where it intersects the front, just ahead of an eastward migrating frontal wave, across northern Wisconsin into Upper Michigan during the peak late afternoon into evening instability. ...Lee of northern Rockies into Front Range... In the presence of steep lapse rates, moistening easterly to southeasterly near-surface flow, beneath modest westerly flow aloft, may contribute to sufficient destabilization and shear to support widely scattered strong to severe storms. This may include evolving supercells near/just east of the higher terrain late Wednesday afternoon and evening. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0730 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0229 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WEDNESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF EAST CENTRAL MINNESOTA...NORTHERN AND CENTRAL WISCONSIN AND UPPER MICHIGAN... ...SUMMARY... One or two organizing clusters of storms posing a risk for severe wind and perhaps some hail are possible across parts of the Upper Midwest into adjacent Great Lakes region Wednesday through Wednesday night. ...Discussion... Models indicate some further suppression of the northeastern Pacific mid-level ridging, with flow becoming more zonal and progressive across the British Columbia coast into the Canadian Prairies during this period. A lingering short wave perturbation emerging from the northern U.S. intermountain region may accelerate east of the Montana Rockies, along the central Canadian/U.S. border. This appears likely to be preceded by more subtle smaller-scale impulses migrating around the northern periphery of persistent mid-level ridging centered over the Ohio Valley. It appears that these will accelerate into the southern fringe of strengthening mid-level westerly flow across parts of the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes region into Ontario and Quebec, between the mid-level ridge and a significant mid-level trough/cyclone migrating slowly across Hudson Bay. While a cold front trailing the surface cyclone may continue to advance southward through the Great Plains to the lee of the Rockies, models suggest that it probably will stall across parts of the Upper Midwest into adjacent Great Lakes Wednesday into Wednesday night, near the northern periphery of the mid-level ridge. ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes... It appears that a seasonably moist boundary layer (including dew points around or above 70F) advecting into the region during the day Wednesday, if not earlier, will become supportive of moderate to strong potential instability beneath a remnant plume of modestly steep lower/mid-tropospheric lapse rates. Models suggest that this will generally focus along the stalling surface front, where 30-40 kt west-southwesterly flow in the 700-500 mb layer will contribute to the possible evolution of organizing, eastward propagating convective systems with the potential to produce strong to severe surface gusts. There appears a general signal within the model output that a stalling, trailing flank of outflow associated with an initial cluster of storms may become a focus for renewed convective development, near where it intersects the front, just ahead of an eastward migrating frontal wave, across northern Wisconsin into Upper Michigan during the peak late afternoon into evening instability. ...Lee of northern Rockies into Front Range... In the presence of steep lapse rates, moistening easterly to southeasterly near-surface flow, beneath modest westerly flow aloft, may contribute to sufficient destabilization and shear to support widely scattered strong to severe storms. This may include evolving supercells near/just east of the higher terrain late Wednesday afternoon and evening. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0201 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...Synopsis... The upper-level trough in the Northwest will become more diffuse on Tuesday. Mid-level winds will slacken across the Great Basin. A weak surface trough/boundary will remain in northern Nevada. ...Southern/central Nevada... While surface winds will generally be weaker than previous days, the surface pressure gradient near the boundary will support 15-20 mph in portions of southern/central Nevada. RH of 15-20% appears possible during the afternoon. Area fuels remain dry enough to support elevated fire weather conditions. ..Wendt.. 07/21/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0201 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...Synopsis... The upper-level trough in the Northwest will become more diffuse on Tuesday. Mid-level winds will slacken across the Great Basin. A weak surface trough/boundary will remain in northern Nevada. ...Southern/central Nevada... While surface winds will generally be weaker than previous days, the surface pressure gradient near the boundary will support 15-20 mph in portions of southern/central Nevada. RH of 15-20% appears possible during the afternoon. Area fuels remain dry enough to support elevated fire weather conditions. ..Wendt.. 07/21/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0201 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...Synopsis... The upper-level trough in the Northwest will become more diffuse on Tuesday. Mid-level winds will slacken across the Great Basin. A weak surface trough/boundary will remain in northern Nevada. ...Southern/central Nevada... While surface winds will generally be weaker than previous days, the surface pressure gradient near the boundary will support 15-20 mph in portions of southern/central Nevada. RH of 15-20% appears possible during the afternoon. Area fuels remain dry enough to support elevated fire weather conditions. ..Wendt.. 07/21/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0200 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH-CENTRAL NEVADA... ...Synopsis... With the base of the upper-level trough pivoting into the northern Great Basin today, a belt of stronger mid-level flow will stretch from northern California into northern Nevada and the northern Rockies. At the surface, a low in northeast Nevada/northern Utah will modestly deepen. ...Western/central Great Basin into western Wyoming... A relatively broad area of elevated fire weather is expected across much of the western/northern Great Basin into western Wyoming. RH will fall to 10-20% in Nevada while 15-20% will be more common farther north and east. Surface winds of 15-20 mph will develop by the afternoon. Critical fire weather is expected to occur in northwest and north-central Nevada. Here, the marginally stronger pressure gradient, stronger mid-level flow aloft, and terrain influences from the Sierra will promote winds of around 20 mph with gusts of around 30 mph. Very dry fuels (ERCs above the 90th percentile) in these areas will support rapid fire spread. ..Wendt.. 07/21/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0200 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH-CENTRAL NEVADA... ...Synopsis... With the base of the upper-level trough pivoting into the northern Great Basin today, a belt of stronger mid-level flow will stretch from northern California into northern Nevada and the northern Rockies. At the surface, a low in northeast Nevada/northern Utah will modestly deepen. ...Western/central Great Basin into western Wyoming... A relatively broad area of elevated fire weather is expected across much of the western/northern Great Basin into western Wyoming. RH will fall to 10-20% in Nevada while 15-20% will be more common farther north and east. Surface winds of 15-20 mph will develop by the afternoon. Critical fire weather is expected to occur in northwest and north-central Nevada. Here, the marginally stronger pressure gradient, stronger mid-level flow aloft, and terrain influences from the Sierra will promote winds of around 20 mph with gusts of around 30 mph. Very dry fuels (ERCs above the 90th percentile) in these areas will support rapid fire spread. ..Wendt.. 07/21/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0200 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH-CENTRAL NEVADA... ...Synopsis... With the base of the upper-level trough pivoting into the northern Great Basin today, a belt of stronger mid-level flow will stretch from northern California into northern Nevada and the northern Rockies. At the surface, a low in northeast Nevada/northern Utah will modestly deepen. ...Western/central Great Basin into western Wyoming... A relatively broad area of elevated fire weather is expected across much of the western/northern Great Basin into western Wyoming. RH will fall to 10-20% in Nevada while 15-20% will be more common farther north and east. Surface winds of 15-20 mph will develop by the afternoon. Critical fire weather is expected to occur in northwest and north-central Nevada. Here, the marginally stronger pressure gradient, stronger mid-level flow aloft, and terrain influences from the Sierra will promote winds of around 20 mph with gusts of around 30 mph. Very dry fuels (ERCs above the 90th percentile) in these areas will support rapid fire spread. ..Wendt.. 07/21/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0200 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH-CENTRAL NEVADA... ...Synopsis... With the base of the upper-level trough pivoting into the northern Great Basin today, a belt of stronger mid-level flow will stretch from northern California into northern Nevada and the northern Rockies. At the surface, a low in northeast Nevada/northern Utah will modestly deepen. ...Western/central Great Basin into western Wyoming... A relatively broad area of elevated fire weather is expected across much of the western/northern Great Basin into western Wyoming. RH will fall to 10-20% in Nevada while 15-20% will be more common farther north and east. Surface winds of 15-20 mph will develop by the afternoon. Critical fire weather is expected to occur in northwest and north-central Nevada. Here, the marginally stronger pressure gradient, stronger mid-level flow aloft, and terrain influences from the Sierra will promote winds of around 20 mph with gusts of around 30 mph. Very dry fuels (ERCs above the 90th percentile) in these areas will support rapid fire spread. ..Wendt.. 07/21/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1202 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTH DAKOTA...NORTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...MUCH OF CENTRAL MINNESOTA...AND ADJACENT NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN... ...SUMMARY... Scattered strong thunderstorm development may impact parts of the northern Rockies and Great Plains into Upper Midwest Tuesday into Tuesday night, posing at least some risk for severe weather. ...Discussion... Models continue to indicate that an increasingly prominent mid-level high will evolve across parts of the middle Mississippi/lower Ohio Valley region during this period, within persistent ridging encompassing much of the interior U.S. Modest, anticyclonic flow around the northern periphery of the broader ridging is likely to be maintained across the northern Great Basin through the Dakotas and Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and adjacent portions of Ontario and Quebec. It appears that mid-level ridging will also remain prominent across much of the northeastern Pacific, though it may begin to undergo some suppression. Between the ridging, weak mid-level troughing is likely to linger across the Pacific coast vicinity. As one much more significant short wave trough and embedded cyclone in higher latitudes progress slowly toward the Hudson Bay vicinity, it still appears that one smaller-scale short wave perturbation emerging from the Pacific Northwest may accelerate across and northeast of the mountains of western Montana. However, models now generally indicate that a slightly stronger perturbation may linger to the southwest, across the northern intermountain region. In lower levels, a cold front trailing the higher latitude cyclone is forecast to advance across the international border into the northern Great Plains late Tuesday into Tuesday night. It appears another cold front may make further progress southward though the southern Atlantic coast vicinity, well south of the mid-latitude westerlies. ...Northern Rockies/Great Plains into Upper Midwest... Beneath the warm mid-level ridging, in the wake of a prior frontal passage, seasonably moist boundary layer air is forecast to surge from the middle Missouri Valley and adjacent Great Plains toward the Upper Midwest/adjacent Great Lakes, in advance of the front approaching from the Canadian Prairies. This moisture appears likely to once again contribute to moderate to large potential instability within modestly deep pre-frontal surface troughing, aided by insolation and the presence of generally steep tropospheric lapse rates, though with warm, capping layers aloft. Near the southern periphery of a belt of strengthening southwesterly mid-level flow, it still appears that this environment will become at least conditionally supportive of organized convective development. However, south of the international border, forcing for ascent to support convective development is likely to be mostly tied to subtle perturbations progressing around the northern periphery of the mid-level ridging, which remain uncertain at this time. There does appear a general consensus that stronger boundary-layer heating, within the lee surface troughing, will occur roughly in a narrow corridor from the western South Dakota/Nebraska state border vicinity through northeastern South Dakota/adjacent west central Minnesota by late afternoon, with a zone of strengthening differential heating extending east-southeastward across central Minnesota. It is possible that the boundary intersection could become a focus for isolated late afternoon supercell development, with warm advection along the zone of differential surface heating, aided by a strengthening southerly low-level jet impinging on it, contributing to an upscale growing cluster of storms Tuesday evening. However, due to the warm and capping air aloft, and possible weak upper support for ascent, this remains rather uncertain. With a more substantive short wave perturbation lingering back across the northern intermountain region, models suggest that more substantive destabilization is possible on moistening low-level northeasterly to easterly flow into the higher terrain of south central through southeastern Montana. Aided by the pronounced veering of winds from near surface to mid-levels, it appears that deep-layer shear may become conducive to isolated to widely scattered supercell development late Tuesday afternoon and evening. ...South Carolina into Georgia... Although lapse rates may be modest, high moisture content along/ahead of the slowly southwestward advancing cold front may support the development of modest CAPE and contribute to an environment conducive to convection capable of producing a few strong downbursts. It is also possible that unsaturated layers may be sufficient to contribute to broader cold pools accompanied by potentially damaging winds along the gust fronts. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1202 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTH DAKOTA...NORTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...MUCH OF CENTRAL MINNESOTA...AND ADJACENT NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN... ...SUMMARY... Scattered strong thunderstorm development may impact parts of the northern Rockies and Great Plains into Upper Midwest Tuesday into Tuesday night, posing at least some risk for severe weather. ...Discussion... Models continue to indicate that an increasingly prominent mid-level high will evolve across parts of the middle Mississippi/lower Ohio Valley region during this period, within persistent ridging encompassing much of the interior U.S. Modest, anticyclonic flow around the northern periphery of the broader ridging is likely to be maintained across the northern Great Basin through the Dakotas and Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and adjacent portions of Ontario and Quebec. It appears that mid-level ridging will also remain prominent across much of the northeastern Pacific, though it may begin to undergo some suppression. Between the ridging, weak mid-level troughing is likely to linger across the Pacific coast vicinity. As one much more significant short wave trough and embedded cyclone in higher latitudes progress slowly toward the Hudson Bay vicinity, it still appears that one smaller-scale short wave perturbation emerging from the Pacific Northwest may accelerate across and northeast of the mountains of western Montana. However, models now generally indicate that a slightly stronger perturbation may linger to the southwest, across the northern intermountain region. In lower levels, a cold front trailing the higher latitude cyclone is forecast to advance across the international border into the northern Great Plains late Tuesday into Tuesday night. It appears another cold front may make further progress southward though the southern Atlantic coast vicinity, well south of the mid-latitude westerlies. ...Northern Rockies/Great Plains into Upper Midwest... Beneath the warm mid-level ridging, in the wake of a prior frontal passage, seasonably moist boundary layer air is forecast to surge from the middle Missouri Valley and adjacent Great Plains toward the Upper Midwest/adjacent Great Lakes, in advance of the front approaching from the Canadian Prairies. This moisture appears likely to once again contribute to moderate to large potential instability within modestly deep pre-frontal surface troughing, aided by insolation and the presence of generally steep tropospheric lapse rates, though with warm, capping layers aloft. Near the southern periphery of a belt of strengthening southwesterly mid-level flow, it still appears that this environment will become at least conditionally supportive of organized convective development. However, south of the international border, forcing for ascent to support convective development is likely to be mostly tied to subtle perturbations progressing around the northern periphery of the mid-level ridging, which remain uncertain at this time. There does appear a general consensus that stronger boundary-layer heating, within the lee surface troughing, will occur roughly in a narrow corridor from the western South Dakota/Nebraska state border vicinity through northeastern South Dakota/adjacent west central Minnesota by late afternoon, with a zone of strengthening differential heating extending east-southeastward across central Minnesota. It is possible that the boundary intersection could become a focus for isolated late afternoon supercell development, with warm advection along the zone of differential surface heating, aided by a strengthening southerly low-level jet impinging on it, contributing to an upscale growing cluster of storms Tuesday evening. However, due to the warm and capping air aloft, and possible weak upper support for ascent, this remains rather uncertain. With a more substantive short wave perturbation lingering back across the northern intermountain region, models suggest that more substantive destabilization is possible on moistening low-level northeasterly to easterly flow into the higher terrain of south central through southeastern Montana. Aided by the pronounced veering of winds from near surface to mid-levels, it appears that deep-layer shear may become conducive to isolated to widely scattered supercell development late Tuesday afternoon and evening. ...South Carolina into Georgia... Although lapse rates may be modest, high moisture content along/ahead of the slowly southwestward advancing cold front may support the development of modest CAPE and contribute to an environment conducive to convection capable of producing a few strong downbursts. It is also possible that unsaturated layers may be sufficient to contribute to broader cold pools accompanied by potentially damaging winds along the gust fronts. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1202 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTH DAKOTA...NORTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...MUCH OF CENTRAL MINNESOTA...AND ADJACENT NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN... ...SUMMARY... Scattered strong thunderstorm development may impact parts of the northern Rockies and Great Plains into Upper Midwest Tuesday into Tuesday night, posing at least some risk for severe weather. ...Discussion... Models continue to indicate that an increasingly prominent mid-level high will evolve across parts of the middle Mississippi/lower Ohio Valley region during this period, within persistent ridging encompassing much of the interior U.S. Modest, anticyclonic flow around the northern periphery of the broader ridging is likely to be maintained across the northern Great Basin through the Dakotas and Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and adjacent portions of Ontario and Quebec. It appears that mid-level ridging will also remain prominent across much of the northeastern Pacific, though it may begin to undergo some suppression. Between the ridging, weak mid-level troughing is likely to linger across the Pacific coast vicinity. As one much more significant short wave trough and embedded cyclone in higher latitudes progress slowly toward the Hudson Bay vicinity, it still appears that one smaller-scale short wave perturbation emerging from the Pacific Northwest may accelerate across and northeast of the mountains of western Montana. However, models now generally indicate that a slightly stronger perturbation may linger to the southwest, across the northern intermountain region. In lower levels, a cold front trailing the higher latitude cyclone is forecast to advance across the international border into the northern Great Plains late Tuesday into Tuesday night. It appears another cold front may make further progress southward though the southern Atlantic coast vicinity, well south of the mid-latitude westerlies. ...Northern Rockies/Great Plains into Upper Midwest... Beneath the warm mid-level ridging, in the wake of a prior frontal passage, seasonably moist boundary layer air is forecast to surge from the middle Missouri Valley and adjacent Great Plains toward the Upper Midwest/adjacent Great Lakes, in advance of the front approaching from the Canadian Prairies. This moisture appears likely to once again contribute to moderate to large potential instability within modestly deep pre-frontal surface troughing, aided by insolation and the presence of generally steep tropospheric lapse rates, though with warm, capping layers aloft. Near the southern periphery of a belt of strengthening southwesterly mid-level flow, it still appears that this environment will become at least conditionally supportive of organized convective development. However, south of the international border, forcing for ascent to support convective development is likely to be mostly tied to subtle perturbations progressing around the northern periphery of the mid-level ridging, which remain uncertain at this time. There does appear a general consensus that stronger boundary-layer heating, within the lee surface troughing, will occur roughly in a narrow corridor from the western South Dakota/Nebraska state border vicinity through northeastern South Dakota/adjacent west central Minnesota by late afternoon, with a zone of strengthening differential heating extending east-southeastward across central Minnesota. It is possible that the boundary intersection could become a focus for isolated late afternoon supercell development, with warm advection along the zone of differential surface heating, aided by a strengthening southerly low-level jet impinging on it, contributing to an upscale growing cluster of storms Tuesday evening. However, due to the warm and capping air aloft, and possible weak upper support for ascent, this remains rather uncertain. With a more substantive short wave perturbation lingering back across the northern intermountain region, models suggest that more substantive destabilization is possible on moistening low-level northeasterly to easterly flow into the higher terrain of south central through southeastern Montana. Aided by the pronounced veering of winds from near surface to mid-levels, it appears that deep-layer shear may become conducive to isolated to widely scattered supercell development late Tuesday afternoon and evening. ...South Carolina into Georgia... Although lapse rates may be modest, high moisture content along/ahead of the slowly southwestward advancing cold front may support the development of modest CAPE and contribute to an environment conducive to convection capable of producing a few strong downbursts. It is also possible that unsaturated layers may be sufficient to contribute to broader cold pools accompanied by potentially damaging winds along the gust fronts. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1202 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTH DAKOTA...NORTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...MUCH OF CENTRAL MINNESOTA...AND ADJACENT NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN... ...SUMMARY... Scattered strong thunderstorm development may impact parts of the northern Rockies and Great Plains into Upper Midwest Tuesday into Tuesday night, posing at least some risk for severe weather. ...Discussion... Models continue to indicate that an increasingly prominent mid-level high will evolve across parts of the middle Mississippi/lower Ohio Valley region during this period, within persistent ridging encompassing much of the interior U.S. Modest, anticyclonic flow around the northern periphery of the broader ridging is likely to be maintained across the northern Great Basin through the Dakotas and Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and adjacent portions of Ontario and Quebec. It appears that mid-level ridging will also remain prominent across much of the northeastern Pacific, though it may begin to undergo some suppression. Between the ridging, weak mid-level troughing is likely to linger across the Pacific coast vicinity. As one much more significant short wave trough and embedded cyclone in higher latitudes progress slowly toward the Hudson Bay vicinity, it still appears that one smaller-scale short wave perturbation emerging from the Pacific Northwest may accelerate across and northeast of the mountains of western Montana. However, models now generally indicate that a slightly stronger perturbation may linger to the southwest, across the northern intermountain region. In lower levels, a cold front trailing the higher latitude cyclone is forecast to advance across the international border into the northern Great Plains late Tuesday into Tuesday night. It appears another cold front may make further progress southward though the southern Atlantic coast vicinity, well south of the mid-latitude westerlies. ...Northern Rockies/Great Plains into Upper Midwest... Beneath the warm mid-level ridging, in the wake of a prior frontal passage, seasonably moist boundary layer air is forecast to surge from the middle Missouri Valley and adjacent Great Plains toward the Upper Midwest/adjacent Great Lakes, in advance of the front approaching from the Canadian Prairies. This moisture appears likely to once again contribute to moderate to large potential instability within modestly deep pre-frontal surface troughing, aided by insolation and the presence of generally steep tropospheric lapse rates, though with warm, capping layers aloft. Near the southern periphery of a belt of strengthening southwesterly mid-level flow, it still appears that this environment will become at least conditionally supportive of organized convective development. However, south of the international border, forcing for ascent to support convective development is likely to be mostly tied to subtle perturbations progressing around the northern periphery of the mid-level ridging, which remain uncertain at this time. There does appear a general consensus that stronger boundary-layer heating, within the lee surface troughing, will occur roughly in a narrow corridor from the western South Dakota/Nebraska state border vicinity through northeastern South Dakota/adjacent west central Minnesota by late afternoon, with a zone of strengthening differential heating extending east-southeastward across central Minnesota. It is possible that the boundary intersection could become a focus for isolated late afternoon supercell development, with warm advection along the zone of differential surface heating, aided by a strengthening southerly low-level jet impinging on it, contributing to an upscale growing cluster of storms Tuesday evening. However, due to the warm and capping air aloft, and possible weak upper support for ascent, this remains rather uncertain. With a more substantive short wave perturbation lingering back across the northern intermountain region, models suggest that more substantive destabilization is possible on moistening low-level northeasterly to easterly flow into the higher terrain of south central through southeastern Montana. Aided by the pronounced veering of winds from near surface to mid-levels, it appears that deep-layer shear may become conducive to isolated to widely scattered supercell development late Tuesday afternoon and evening. ...South Carolina into Georgia... Although lapse rates may be modest, high moisture content along/ahead of the slowly southwestward advancing cold front may support the development of modest CAPE and contribute to an environment conducive to convection capable of producing a few strong downbursts. It is also possible that unsaturated layers may be sufficient to contribute to broader cold pools accompanied by potentially damaging winds along the gust fronts. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1202 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTH DAKOTA...NORTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...MUCH OF CENTRAL MINNESOTA...AND ADJACENT NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN... ...SUMMARY... Scattered strong thunderstorm development may impact parts of the northern Rockies and Great Plains into Upper Midwest Tuesday into Tuesday night, posing at least some risk for severe weather. ...Discussion... Models continue to indicate that an increasingly prominent mid-level high will evolve across parts of the middle Mississippi/lower Ohio Valley region during this period, within persistent ridging encompassing much of the interior U.S. Modest, anticyclonic flow around the northern periphery of the broader ridging is likely to be maintained across the northern Great Basin through the Dakotas and Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and adjacent portions of Ontario and Quebec. It appears that mid-level ridging will also remain prominent across much of the northeastern Pacific, though it may begin to undergo some suppression. Between the ridging, weak mid-level troughing is likely to linger across the Pacific coast vicinity. As one much more significant short wave trough and embedded cyclone in higher latitudes progress slowly toward the Hudson Bay vicinity, it still appears that one smaller-scale short wave perturbation emerging from the Pacific Northwest may accelerate across and northeast of the mountains of western Montana. However, models now generally indicate that a slightly stronger perturbation may linger to the southwest, across the northern intermountain region. In lower levels, a cold front trailing the higher latitude cyclone is forecast to advance across the international border into the northern Great Plains late Tuesday into Tuesday night. It appears another cold front may make further progress southward though the southern Atlantic coast vicinity, well south of the mid-latitude westerlies. ...Northern Rockies/Great Plains into Upper Midwest... Beneath the warm mid-level ridging, in the wake of a prior frontal passage, seasonably moist boundary layer air is forecast to surge from the middle Missouri Valley and adjacent Great Plains toward the Upper Midwest/adjacent Great Lakes, in advance of the front approaching from the Canadian Prairies. This moisture appears likely to once again contribute to moderate to large potential instability within modestly deep pre-frontal surface troughing, aided by insolation and the presence of generally steep tropospheric lapse rates, though with warm, capping layers aloft. Near the southern periphery of a belt of strengthening southwesterly mid-level flow, it still appears that this environment will become at least conditionally supportive of organized convective development. However, south of the international border, forcing for ascent to support convective development is likely to be mostly tied to subtle perturbations progressing around the northern periphery of the mid-level ridging, which remain uncertain at this time. There does appear a general consensus that stronger boundary-layer heating, within the lee surface troughing, will occur roughly in a narrow corridor from the western South Dakota/Nebraska state border vicinity through northeastern South Dakota/adjacent west central Minnesota by late afternoon, with a zone of strengthening differential heating extending east-southeastward across central Minnesota. It is possible that the boundary intersection could become a focus for isolated late afternoon supercell development, with warm advection along the zone of differential surface heating, aided by a strengthening southerly low-level jet impinging on it, contributing to an upscale growing cluster of storms Tuesday evening. However, due to the warm and capping air aloft, and possible weak upper support for ascent, this remains rather uncertain. With a more substantive short wave perturbation lingering back across the northern intermountain region, models suggest that more substantive destabilization is possible on moistening low-level northeasterly to easterly flow into the higher terrain of south central through southeastern Montana. Aided by the pronounced veering of winds from near surface to mid-levels, it appears that deep-layer shear may become conducive to isolated to widely scattered supercell development late Tuesday afternoon and evening. ...South Carolina into Georgia... Although lapse rates may be modest, high moisture content along/ahead of the slowly southwestward advancing cold front may support the development of modest CAPE and contribute to an environment conducive to convection capable of producing a few strong downbursts. It is also possible that unsaturated layers may be sufficient to contribute to broader cold pools accompanied by potentially damaging winds along the gust fronts. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0600 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1252 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms capable of producing severe wind gusts, large hail, and perhaps a tornado or two are expected across parts of the northern Great Plains. Additional isolated strong to severe storms are possible in the central Plains. ...Synopsis... Modest amplification of an upper-level ridge is expected across the Plains into the Upper Midwest today. In the Northwest, the upper-level trough will take on a more neutral tilt before progressing eastward by Tuesday morning. At the surface, modest lee troughing will be in place within the northern/central High Plains regions. An outflow boundary is likely to be situated somewhere in the North Dakota/South Dakota border vicinity. Farther east into Minnesota, a warm front like feature will arc southeastward into the lower Ohio Valley. Strong to extreme buoyancy is forecast to develop within parts of the northern/central Plains. ...Montana into western North Dakota... The highest confidence in the development of severe storms is within the terrain of central Montana. Additional storms may develop in the vicinity of the Big Horns and move into southeast Montana. Mid-level heights will be rising through the morning/afternoon so initiation could be somewhat delayed. Subtle mid-level height falls will occur during the evening, however. With a belt of strong mid-level winds across the region, initial storms should be supercellular. Large hail and severe wind gusts will be the initial hazards. With storms developing in somewhat drier air, it is possible they will be outflow dominant and not maintain their cellular mode as they move northeast into greater moisture. The environment will be conditionally favorable for 2+ inch hail, but the spatial extent of this threat is not certain. Severe wind gusts will likely become more common later in the evening as activity grows upscale. ...Dakotas into Minnesota/Mid-Missouri Valley... Two clusters of convection are ongoing in the Dakotas. Based on current surface observations, this activity is expected to generally move eastward along the North Dakota/South Dakota border. What occurs with the outflow from this activity into this afternoon will play a role in the severe potential within parts of the Dakotas. Strong to extreme buoyancy will be present south of the outflow. Forcing for ascent will be weak. Storm development will depend on the timing of the early morning convection and subsequent heating/mesoscale lift during the afternoon. A weak surface low in western South Dakota may lead to some locally enhanced convergence along the outflow and trigger storms. This scenario is also not certain. Effective shear of 40-45 kts and MLCAPE likely above 4000 J/kg will support intense, organized storms. Initial storms would be capable large hail, severe winds, and perhaps a tornado or two. Storms that do develop would eventually grow upscale and potentially produce a swatch of severe winds. Model guidance varies on the timing/location of this activity. There is some potential for a cluster/MCS to propagate along the warm front feature into central Minnesota. Other solutions show the MCS moving into the greater buoyancy toward the Mid-Missouri Valley. Given some capping can be expected, storms may not develop at all. The marginal risk has been expanded to account for these possibilities, but confidence remains too low for a categorical upgrade at this time. ...Central High Plains... Strong heating near the surface trough should promote isolated to widely scattered storms from the Palmer Divide into the Nebraska Panhandle. Effective shear of 25-30 kts (generally weaker with southern extent) will allow for marginally organized storms. Severe wind gusts are the main concern as storms develop in the drier air. Some potential for large hail may also exist if storms can persist into greater moisture to the east. ..Wendt/Dean.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0600 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1252 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms capable of producing severe wind gusts, large hail, and perhaps a tornado or two are expected across parts of the northern Great Plains. Additional isolated strong to severe storms are possible in the central Plains. ...Synopsis... Modest amplification of an upper-level ridge is expected across the Plains into the Upper Midwest today. In the Northwest, the upper-level trough will take on a more neutral tilt before progressing eastward by Tuesday morning. At the surface, modest lee troughing will be in place within the northern/central High Plains regions. An outflow boundary is likely to be situated somewhere in the North Dakota/South Dakota border vicinity. Farther east into Minnesota, a warm front like feature will arc southeastward into the lower Ohio Valley. Strong to extreme buoyancy is forecast to develop within parts of the northern/central Plains. ...Montana into western North Dakota... The highest confidence in the development of severe storms is within the terrain of central Montana. Additional storms may develop in the vicinity of the Big Horns and move into southeast Montana. Mid-level heights will be rising through the morning/afternoon so initiation could be somewhat delayed. Subtle mid-level height falls will occur during the evening, however. With a belt of strong mid-level winds across the region, initial storms should be supercellular. Large hail and severe wind gusts will be the initial hazards. With storms developing in somewhat drier air, it is possible they will be outflow dominant and not maintain their cellular mode as they move northeast into greater moisture. The environment will be conditionally favorable for 2+ inch hail, but the spatial extent of this threat is not certain. Severe wind gusts will likely become more common later in the evening as activity grows upscale. ...Dakotas into Minnesota/Mid-Missouri Valley... Two clusters of convection are ongoing in the Dakotas. Based on current surface observations, this activity is expected to generally move eastward along the North Dakota/South Dakota border. What occurs with the outflow from this activity into this afternoon will play a role in the severe potential within parts of the Dakotas. Strong to extreme buoyancy will be present south of the outflow. Forcing for ascent will be weak. Storm development will depend on the timing of the early morning convection and subsequent heating/mesoscale lift during the afternoon. A weak surface low in western South Dakota may lead to some locally enhanced convergence along the outflow and trigger storms. This scenario is also not certain. Effective shear of 40-45 kts and MLCAPE likely above 4000 J/kg will support intense, organized storms. Initial storms would be capable large hail, severe winds, and perhaps a tornado or two. Storms that do develop would eventually grow upscale and potentially produce a swatch of severe winds. Model guidance varies on the timing/location of this activity. There is some potential for a cluster/MCS to propagate along the warm front feature into central Minnesota. Other solutions show the MCS moving into the greater buoyancy toward the Mid-Missouri Valley. Given some capping can be expected, storms may not develop at all. The marginal risk has been expanded to account for these possibilities, but confidence remains too low for a categorical upgrade at this time. ...Central High Plains... Strong heating near the surface trough should promote isolated to widely scattered storms from the Palmer Divide into the Nebraska Panhandle. Effective shear of 25-30 kts (generally weaker with southern extent) will allow for marginally organized storms. Severe wind gusts are the main concern as storms develop in the drier air. Some potential for large hail may also exist if storms can persist into greater moisture to the east. ..Wendt/Dean.. 07/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jul 21, 2025 0600 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 weeks 1 day ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1252 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms capable of producing severe wind gusts, large hail, and perhaps a tornado or two are expected across parts of the northern Great Plains. Additional isolated strong to severe storms are possible in the central Plains. ...Synopsis... Modest amplification of an upper-level ridge is expected across the Plains into the Upper Midwest today. In the Northwest, the upper-level trough will take on a more neutral tilt before progressing eastward by Tuesday morning. At the surface, modest lee troughing will be in place within the northern/central High Plains regions. An outflow boundary is likely to be situated somewhere in the North Dakota/South Dakota border vicinity. Farther east into Minnesota, a warm front like feature will arc southeastward into the lower Ohio Valley. Strong to extreme buoyancy is forecast to develop within parts of the northern/central Plains. ...Montana into western North Dakota... The highest confidence in the development of severe storms is within the terrain of central Montana. Additional storms may develop in the vicinity of the Big Horns and move into southeast Montana. Mid-level heights will be rising through the morning/afternoon so initiation could be somewhat delayed. Subtle mid-level height falls will occur during the evening, however. With a belt of strong mid-level winds across the region, initial storms should be supercellular. Large hail and severe wind gusts will be the initial hazards. With storms developing in somewhat drier air, it is possible they will be outflow dominant and not maintain their cellular mode as they move northeast into greater moisture. The environment will be conditionally favorable for 2+ inch hail, but the spatial extent of this threat is not certain. Severe wind gusts will likely become more common later in the evening as activity grows upscale. ...Dakotas into Minnesota/Mid-Missouri Valley... Two clusters of convection are ongoing in the Dakotas. Based on current surface observations, this activity is expected to generally move eastward along the North Dakota/South Dakota border. What occurs with the outflow from this activity into this afternoon will play a role in the severe potential within parts of the Dakotas. Strong to extreme buoyancy will be present south of the outflow. Forcing for ascent will be weak. Storm development will depend on the timing of the early morning convection and subsequent heating/mesoscale lift during the afternoon. A weak surface low in western South Dakota may lead to some locally enhanced convergence along the outflow and trigger storms. This scenario is also not certain. Effective shear of 40-45 kts and MLCAPE likely above 4000 J/kg will support intense, organized storms. Initial storms would be capable large hail, severe winds, and perhaps a tornado or two. Storms that do develop would eventually grow upscale and potentially produce a swatch of severe winds. Model guidance varies on the timing/location of this activity. There is some potential for a cluster/MCS to propagate along the warm front feature into central Minnesota. Other solutions show the MCS moving into the greater buoyancy toward the Mid-Missouri Valley. Given some capping can be expected, storms may not develop at all. The marginal risk has been expanded to account for these possibilities, but confidence remains too low for a categorical upgrade at this time. ...Central High Plains... Strong heating near the surface trough should promote isolated to widely scattered storms from the Palmer Divide into the Nebraska Panhandle. Effective shear of 25-30 kts (generally weaker with southern extent) will allow for marginally organized storms. Severe wind gusts are the main concern as storms develop in the drier air. Some potential for large hail may also exist if storms can persist into greater moisture to the east. ..Wendt/Dean.. 07/21/2025 Read more