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2 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111700Z - 121200Z
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with only minor
adjustments made to the isolated dry thunderstorm delineation to
account for the latest guidance consensus.
..Squitieri.. 07/11/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0136 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025/
...Synopsis...
High pressure will increase in amplitude across the western US
today, with mainly terrain driven breezes expected where fuels are
the driest.
Across portions of western Colorado, a shortwave trough will bring
isolated dry thunderstorms within a plume of shallow mid-level
moisture. Fuels within this region are critically dry with ERCs
exceeding critically dry thresholds, with fuel moisture dipping into
the single digits amid a severe drought and more than a month
without appreciable rainfall. New fire activity has been noted over
the last 24-48 hours with lightning activity. An isolated dry
thunderstorm area was maintained across this region with this
outlook.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111700Z - 121200Z
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with only minor
adjustments made to the isolated dry thunderstorm delineation to
account for the latest guidance consensus.
..Squitieri.. 07/11/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0136 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025/
...Synopsis...
High pressure will increase in amplitude across the western US
today, with mainly terrain driven breezes expected where fuels are
the driest.
Across portions of western Colorado, a shortwave trough will bring
isolated dry thunderstorms within a plume of shallow mid-level
moisture. Fuels within this region are critically dry with ERCs
exceeding critically dry thresholds, with fuel moisture dipping into
the single digits amid a severe drought and more than a month
without appreciable rainfall. New fire activity has been noted over
the last 24-48 hours with lightning activity. An isolated dry
thunderstorm area was maintained across this region with this
outlook.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111700Z - 121200Z
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with only minor
adjustments made to the isolated dry thunderstorm delineation to
account for the latest guidance consensus.
..Squitieri.. 07/11/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0136 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025/
...Synopsis...
High pressure will increase in amplitude across the western US
today, with mainly terrain driven breezes expected where fuels are
the driest.
Across portions of western Colorado, a shortwave trough will bring
isolated dry thunderstorms within a plume of shallow mid-level
moisture. Fuels within this region are critically dry with ERCs
exceeding critically dry thresholds, with fuel moisture dipping into
the single digits amid a severe drought and more than a month
without appreciable rainfall. New fire activity has been noted over
the last 24-48 hours with lightning activity. An isolated dry
thunderstorm area was maintained across this region with this
outlook.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111700Z - 121200Z
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with only minor
adjustments made to the isolated dry thunderstorm delineation to
account for the latest guidance consensus.
..Squitieri.. 07/11/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0136 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025/
...Synopsis...
High pressure will increase in amplitude across the western US
today, with mainly terrain driven breezes expected where fuels are
the driest.
Across portions of western Colorado, a shortwave trough will bring
isolated dry thunderstorms within a plume of shallow mid-level
moisture. Fuels within this region are critically dry with ERCs
exceeding critically dry thresholds, with fuel moisture dipping into
the single digits amid a severe drought and more than a month
without appreciable rainfall. New fire activity has been noted over
the last 24-48 hours with lightning activity. An isolated dry
thunderstorm area was maintained across this region with this
outlook.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111700Z - 121200Z
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with only minor
adjustments made to the isolated dry thunderstorm delineation to
account for the latest guidance consensus.
..Squitieri.. 07/11/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0136 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025/
...Synopsis...
High pressure will increase in amplitude across the western US
today, with mainly terrain driven breezes expected where fuels are
the driest.
Across portions of western Colorado, a shortwave trough will bring
isolated dry thunderstorms within a plume of shallow mid-level
moisture. Fuels within this region are critically dry with ERCs
exceeding critically dry thresholds, with fuel moisture dipping into
the single digits amid a severe drought and more than a month
without appreciable rainfall. New fire activity has been noted over
the last 24-48 hours with lightning activity. An isolated dry
thunderstorm area was maintained across this region with this
outlook.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111700Z - 121200Z
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with only minor
adjustments made to the isolated dry thunderstorm delineation to
account for the latest guidance consensus.
..Squitieri.. 07/11/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0136 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025/
...Synopsis...
High pressure will increase in amplitude across the western US
today, with mainly terrain driven breezes expected where fuels are
the driest.
Across portions of western Colorado, a shortwave trough will bring
isolated dry thunderstorms within a plume of shallow mid-level
moisture. Fuels within this region are critically dry with ERCs
exceeding critically dry thresholds, with fuel moisture dipping into
the single digits amid a severe drought and more than a month
without appreciable rainfall. New fire activity has been noted over
the last 24-48 hours with lightning activity. An isolated dry
thunderstorm area was maintained across this region with this
outlook.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111700Z - 121200Z
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with only minor
adjustments made to the isolated dry thunderstorm delineation to
account for the latest guidance consensus.
..Squitieri.. 07/11/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0136 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025/
...Synopsis...
High pressure will increase in amplitude across the western US
today, with mainly terrain driven breezes expected where fuels are
the driest.
Across portions of western Colorado, a shortwave trough will bring
isolated dry thunderstorms within a plume of shallow mid-level
moisture. Fuels within this region are critically dry with ERCs
exceeding critically dry thresholds, with fuel moisture dipping into
the single digits amid a severe drought and more than a month
without appreciable rainfall. New fire activity has been noted over
the last 24-48 hours with lightning activity. An isolated dry
thunderstorm area was maintained across this region with this
outlook.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111700Z - 121200Z
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with only minor
adjustments made to the isolated dry thunderstorm delineation to
account for the latest guidance consensus.
..Squitieri.. 07/11/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0136 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025/
...Synopsis...
High pressure will increase in amplitude across the western US
today, with mainly terrain driven breezes expected where fuels are
the driest.
Across portions of western Colorado, a shortwave trough will bring
isolated dry thunderstorms within a plume of shallow mid-level
moisture. Fuels within this region are critically dry with ERCs
exceeding critically dry thresholds, with fuel moisture dipping into
the single digits amid a severe drought and more than a month
without appreciable rainfall. New fire activity has been noted over
the last 24-48 hours with lightning activity. An isolated dry
thunderstorm area was maintained across this region with this
outlook.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0754 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111300Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST
AND CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening across
the Midwest to southern portions of the Great Lakes region,
accompanied by a risk for damaging wind gusts, hail, as well as some
tornado potential. Severe thunderstorms are also expected across the
central/southern High Plains and Upper Midwest.
...Midwest/Lower Missouri Valley to Great Lakes...
A decayed overnight MCS and residual convection/cloud cover will
reinforce the baroclinic zone regionally. Near/south of the
boundary, surface dew points near and above 70F, beneath modestly
steep mid-level lapse rates, are forecast to contribute to CAPE on
the order of 2000-3000 J/kg. This will be beneath a lingering belt
of convectively augmented mid-level flow (on the order of 30-50 kt
in the 700-500 mb layer). Coupled with modest, clockwise-curved
low-level hodographs in advance of a weak surface wave, the
environment should become conducive to supercell structures into
mid/late afternoon. These supercells may pose a risk for hail and
potentially a couple of tornadoes across parts of northern Missouri
and southern/eastern Iowa into northern Illinois, and possibly far
southern Wisconsin. Damaging wind gusts should become the more
predominant potential hazard as convection tends to grow upscale
into east/southeastward-moving clusters this evening.
...Central High Plains...
The immediate post-frontal regime should be favorable for severe
storm development this afternoon into evening across southeast
Wyoming and northeast Colorado into southwest Nebraska/northwest
Kansas. Some initial supercells capable of large hail can be
expected, and one or more east/eastward-moving clusters may evolve
by evening with severe-caliber winds also a possibility.
...Upper Midwest...
At least isolated strong to severe thunderstorms can be expected
near the east/southeastward-moving front this afternoon, including
the eastern Dakotas into much of Minnesota. This will be influenced
by the amplifying upper-level trough approaching the
Dakotas/northern Minnesota. The strongest winds aloft/vertical shear
will tend to lag the front, but ample near/pre-frontal buoyancy will
support storms capable of hail/wind.
...Southern Rockies into the Great Plains...
Thermodynamic profiles characterized by modest low-level moisture,
but with generally steep lapse rates, including fairly deep
boundary-layer mixing, may become conducive to scattered
thunderstorm clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail late
this afternoon and evening. A degree of storm organization may be
aided by modest shear beneath northwesterly mid-level flow, with
thunderstorm activity mostly initiating off the higher terrain of
the Front Range through Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Additionally,
low-level convergence within surface troughing across southern
Kansas through the Oklahoma/Texas Panhandle vicinity may also become
sufficient for thunderstorm initiation during the peak late
afternoon heating, and one or more semi-organized clusters capable
of wind damage could evolve. This region will be reevaluated in
subsequent outlooks for potential inclusion of a wind-related Slight
Risk.
..Guyer/Bentley.. 07/11/2025
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0754 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111300Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST
AND CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening across
the Midwest to southern portions of the Great Lakes region,
accompanied by a risk for damaging wind gusts, hail, as well as some
tornado potential. Severe thunderstorms are also expected across the
central/southern High Plains and Upper Midwest.
...Midwest/Lower Missouri Valley to Great Lakes...
A decayed overnight MCS and residual convection/cloud cover will
reinforce the baroclinic zone regionally. Near/south of the
boundary, surface dew points near and above 70F, beneath modestly
steep mid-level lapse rates, are forecast to contribute to CAPE on
the order of 2000-3000 J/kg. This will be beneath a lingering belt
of convectively augmented mid-level flow (on the order of 30-50 kt
in the 700-500 mb layer). Coupled with modest, clockwise-curved
low-level hodographs in advance of a weak surface wave, the
environment should become conducive to supercell structures into
mid/late afternoon. These supercells may pose a risk for hail and
potentially a couple of tornadoes across parts of northern Missouri
and southern/eastern Iowa into northern Illinois, and possibly far
southern Wisconsin. Damaging wind gusts should become the more
predominant potential hazard as convection tends to grow upscale
into east/southeastward-moving clusters this evening.
...Central High Plains...
The immediate post-frontal regime should be favorable for severe
storm development this afternoon into evening across southeast
Wyoming and northeast Colorado into southwest Nebraska/northwest
Kansas. Some initial supercells capable of large hail can be
expected, and one or more east/eastward-moving clusters may evolve
by evening with severe-caliber winds also a possibility.
...Upper Midwest...
At least isolated strong to severe thunderstorms can be expected
near the east/southeastward-moving front this afternoon, including
the eastern Dakotas into much of Minnesota. This will be influenced
by the amplifying upper-level trough approaching the
Dakotas/northern Minnesota. The strongest winds aloft/vertical shear
will tend to lag the front, but ample near/pre-frontal buoyancy will
support storms capable of hail/wind.
...Southern Rockies into the Great Plains...
Thermodynamic profiles characterized by modest low-level moisture,
but with generally steep lapse rates, including fairly deep
boundary-layer mixing, may become conducive to scattered
thunderstorm clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail late
this afternoon and evening. A degree of storm organization may be
aided by modest shear beneath northwesterly mid-level flow, with
thunderstorm activity mostly initiating off the higher terrain of
the Front Range through Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Additionally,
low-level convergence within surface troughing across southern
Kansas through the Oklahoma/Texas Panhandle vicinity may also become
sufficient for thunderstorm initiation during the peak late
afternoon heating, and one or more semi-organized clusters capable
of wind damage could evolve. This region will be reevaluated in
subsequent outlooks for potential inclusion of a wind-related Slight
Risk.
..Guyer/Bentley.. 07/11/2025
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0754 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111300Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST
AND CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening across
the Midwest to southern portions of the Great Lakes region,
accompanied by a risk for damaging wind gusts, hail, as well as some
tornado potential. Severe thunderstorms are also expected across the
central/southern High Plains and Upper Midwest.
...Midwest/Lower Missouri Valley to Great Lakes...
A decayed overnight MCS and residual convection/cloud cover will
reinforce the baroclinic zone regionally. Near/south of the
boundary, surface dew points near and above 70F, beneath modestly
steep mid-level lapse rates, are forecast to contribute to CAPE on
the order of 2000-3000 J/kg. This will be beneath a lingering belt
of convectively augmented mid-level flow (on the order of 30-50 kt
in the 700-500 mb layer). Coupled with modest, clockwise-curved
low-level hodographs in advance of a weak surface wave, the
environment should become conducive to supercell structures into
mid/late afternoon. These supercells may pose a risk for hail and
potentially a couple of tornadoes across parts of northern Missouri
and southern/eastern Iowa into northern Illinois, and possibly far
southern Wisconsin. Damaging wind gusts should become the more
predominant potential hazard as convection tends to grow upscale
into east/southeastward-moving clusters this evening.
...Central High Plains...
The immediate post-frontal regime should be favorable for severe
storm development this afternoon into evening across southeast
Wyoming and northeast Colorado into southwest Nebraska/northwest
Kansas. Some initial supercells capable of large hail can be
expected, and one or more east/eastward-moving clusters may evolve
by evening with severe-caliber winds also a possibility.
...Upper Midwest...
At least isolated strong to severe thunderstorms can be expected
near the east/southeastward-moving front this afternoon, including
the eastern Dakotas into much of Minnesota. This will be influenced
by the amplifying upper-level trough approaching the
Dakotas/northern Minnesota. The strongest winds aloft/vertical shear
will tend to lag the front, but ample near/pre-frontal buoyancy will
support storms capable of hail/wind.
...Southern Rockies into the Great Plains...
Thermodynamic profiles characterized by modest low-level moisture,
but with generally steep lapse rates, including fairly deep
boundary-layer mixing, may become conducive to scattered
thunderstorm clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail late
this afternoon and evening. A degree of storm organization may be
aided by modest shear beneath northwesterly mid-level flow, with
thunderstorm activity mostly initiating off the higher terrain of
the Front Range through Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Additionally,
low-level convergence within surface troughing across southern
Kansas through the Oklahoma/Texas Panhandle vicinity may also become
sufficient for thunderstorm initiation during the peak late
afternoon heating, and one or more semi-organized clusters capable
of wind damage could evolve. This region will be reevaluated in
subsequent outlooks for potential inclusion of a wind-related Slight
Risk.
..Guyer/Bentley.. 07/11/2025
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0754 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111300Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST
AND CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening across
the Midwest to southern portions of the Great Lakes region,
accompanied by a risk for damaging wind gusts, hail, as well as some
tornado potential. Severe thunderstorms are also expected across the
central/southern High Plains and Upper Midwest.
...Midwest/Lower Missouri Valley to Great Lakes...
A decayed overnight MCS and residual convection/cloud cover will
reinforce the baroclinic zone regionally. Near/south of the
boundary, surface dew points near and above 70F, beneath modestly
steep mid-level lapse rates, are forecast to contribute to CAPE on
the order of 2000-3000 J/kg. This will be beneath a lingering belt
of convectively augmented mid-level flow (on the order of 30-50 kt
in the 700-500 mb layer). Coupled with modest, clockwise-curved
low-level hodographs in advance of a weak surface wave, the
environment should become conducive to supercell structures into
mid/late afternoon. These supercells may pose a risk for hail and
potentially a couple of tornadoes across parts of northern Missouri
and southern/eastern Iowa into northern Illinois, and possibly far
southern Wisconsin. Damaging wind gusts should become the more
predominant potential hazard as convection tends to grow upscale
into east/southeastward-moving clusters this evening.
...Central High Plains...
The immediate post-frontal regime should be favorable for severe
storm development this afternoon into evening across southeast
Wyoming and northeast Colorado into southwest Nebraska/northwest
Kansas. Some initial supercells capable of large hail can be
expected, and one or more east/eastward-moving clusters may evolve
by evening with severe-caliber winds also a possibility.
...Upper Midwest...
At least isolated strong to severe thunderstorms can be expected
near the east/southeastward-moving front this afternoon, including
the eastern Dakotas into much of Minnesota. This will be influenced
by the amplifying upper-level trough approaching the
Dakotas/northern Minnesota. The strongest winds aloft/vertical shear
will tend to lag the front, but ample near/pre-frontal buoyancy will
support storms capable of hail/wind.
...Southern Rockies into the Great Plains...
Thermodynamic profiles characterized by modest low-level moisture,
but with generally steep lapse rates, including fairly deep
boundary-layer mixing, may become conducive to scattered
thunderstorm clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail late
this afternoon and evening. A degree of storm organization may be
aided by modest shear beneath northwesterly mid-level flow, with
thunderstorm activity mostly initiating off the higher terrain of
the Front Range through Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Additionally,
low-level convergence within surface troughing across southern
Kansas through the Oklahoma/Texas Panhandle vicinity may also become
sufficient for thunderstorm initiation during the peak late
afternoon heating, and one or more semi-organized clusters capable
of wind damage could evolve. This region will be reevaluated in
subsequent outlooks for potential inclusion of a wind-related Slight
Risk.
..Guyer/Bentley.. 07/11/2025
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0754 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 111300Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST
AND CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening across
the Midwest to southern portions of the Great Lakes region,
accompanied by a risk for damaging wind gusts, hail, as well as some
tornado potential. Severe thunderstorms are also expected across the
central/southern High Plains and Upper Midwest.
...Midwest/Lower Missouri Valley to Great Lakes...
A decayed overnight MCS and residual convection/cloud cover will
reinforce the baroclinic zone regionally. Near/south of the
boundary, surface dew points near and above 70F, beneath modestly
steep mid-level lapse rates, are forecast to contribute to CAPE on
the order of 2000-3000 J/kg. This will be beneath a lingering belt
of convectively augmented mid-level flow (on the order of 30-50 kt
in the 700-500 mb layer). Coupled with modest, clockwise-curved
low-level hodographs in advance of a weak surface wave, the
environment should become conducive to supercell structures into
mid/late afternoon. These supercells may pose a risk for hail and
potentially a couple of tornadoes across parts of northern Missouri
and southern/eastern Iowa into northern Illinois, and possibly far
southern Wisconsin. Damaging wind gusts should become the more
predominant potential hazard as convection tends to grow upscale
into east/southeastward-moving clusters this evening.
...Central High Plains...
The immediate post-frontal regime should be favorable for severe
storm development this afternoon into evening across southeast
Wyoming and northeast Colorado into southwest Nebraska/northwest
Kansas. Some initial supercells capable of large hail can be
expected, and one or more east/eastward-moving clusters may evolve
by evening with severe-caliber winds also a possibility.
...Upper Midwest...
At least isolated strong to severe thunderstorms can be expected
near the east/southeastward-moving front this afternoon, including
the eastern Dakotas into much of Minnesota. This will be influenced
by the amplifying upper-level trough approaching the
Dakotas/northern Minnesota. The strongest winds aloft/vertical shear
will tend to lag the front, but ample near/pre-frontal buoyancy will
support storms capable of hail/wind.
...Southern Rockies into the Great Plains...
Thermodynamic profiles characterized by modest low-level moisture,
but with generally steep lapse rates, including fairly deep
boundary-layer mixing, may become conducive to scattered
thunderstorm clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail late
this afternoon and evening. A degree of storm organization may be
aided by modest shear beneath northwesterly mid-level flow, with
thunderstorm activity mostly initiating off the higher terrain of
the Front Range through Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Additionally,
low-level convergence within surface troughing across southern
Kansas through the Oklahoma/Texas Panhandle vicinity may also become
sufficient for thunderstorm initiation during the peak late
afternoon heating, and one or more semi-organized clusters capable
of wind damage could evolve. This region will be reevaluated in
subsequent outlooks for potential inclusion of a wind-related Slight
Risk.
..Guyer/Bentley.. 07/11/2025
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
MD 1640 CONCERNING SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH 504... FOR EAST-CENTRAL IOWA INTO PARTS OF FAR NORTHWESTERN ILLINOIS
Mesoscale Discussion 1640
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0243 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Areas affected...east-central Iowa into parts of far northwestern
Illinois
Concerning...Severe Thunderstorm Watch 504...
Valid 110743Z - 110915Z
The severe weather threat for Severe Thunderstorm Watch 504
continues.
SUMMARY...Some severe wind threat continues across eastern Iowa and
parts of far northwestern Illinois.
DISCUSSION...A bowing line of storms which has produced measured
winds as high as 64 knots (at KDSM) continues east across
east-central Iowa. This line of storms is not currently as strong as
it was across central Iowa. However, recent satellite data shows
recent cooling cloud ops associated with this convection and
additional development along the front ahead of the line. This may
result in some strengthening/rejuvenation of the line as it moves
across far eastern Iowa and parts of far northwestern Illinois
within an environment featuring 2000 J/kg MUCAPE. Damaging wind
gusts will likely remain the primary threat from this activity.
..Bentley/Guyer.. 07/11/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...DVN...DMX...
LAT...LON 41959254 42019197 41929124 41729069 41639054 41429050
41259049 41139069 41129110 41169173 41229227 41279248
41959254
MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...55-70 MPH
MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...UP TO 1.25 IN
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0340 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 141200Z - 191200Z
...DISCUSSION...
A surface cold front across the southern Great Plains early in the
period will quickly redevelop northward into the northern Plains in
response to strong lee cyclogenesis across the northern High Plains.
This cyclogenesis will occur in response to a positive-tilt
short-wave trough moving through the broadly zonal mid-level flow
across the northern US.
This front will move back south during the period as a seasonably
strong high pressure builds southward into the central US in the
wake of the aforementioned short-wave trough. Thunderstorms are
likely to develop in the vicinity of the front/aggregate outflow
boundary each afternoon as it moves south. However, given the lack
of significant flow amplification as the mid-level wave crosses the
northern US, it is likely that thunderstorms will remain displaced
south of the requisite effective-layer shear needed to promote an
organized severe threat identifiable at this time range.
One exception to the idea that storms will be displaced from the
better shear may take place on Monday/Day-4 across portions of North
Dakota. Here, low-level moisture will surge northward in response to
the aforementioned northern High Plains lee cyclogenesis. Steep
mid-level lapse rates will overspread the northern Great Plains
during the day, yielding most-unstable CAPE values ranging from 1000
J/kg to perhaps 3000 J/kg depending on model guidance.
However, run-to-run inconsistency in the space and time evolution of
relevant features leads to little confidence in identifying where
any overlap of thunderstorms, instability, and effective-layer shear
might support severe thunderstorms. However, if model guidance
begins to converge on potential scenarios, probabilistic delineation
may become warranted in subsequent forecasts.
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0340 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 141200Z - 191200Z
...DISCUSSION...
A surface cold front across the southern Great Plains early in the
period will quickly redevelop northward into the northern Plains in
response to strong lee cyclogenesis across the northern High Plains.
This cyclogenesis will occur in response to a positive-tilt
short-wave trough moving through the broadly zonal mid-level flow
across the northern US.
This front will move back south during the period as a seasonably
strong high pressure builds southward into the central US in the
wake of the aforementioned short-wave trough. Thunderstorms are
likely to develop in the vicinity of the front/aggregate outflow
boundary each afternoon as it moves south. However, given the lack
of significant flow amplification as the mid-level wave crosses the
northern US, it is likely that thunderstorms will remain displaced
south of the requisite effective-layer shear needed to promote an
organized severe threat identifiable at this time range.
One exception to the idea that storms will be displaced from the
better shear may take place on Monday/Day-4 across portions of North
Dakota. Here, low-level moisture will surge northward in response to
the aforementioned northern High Plains lee cyclogenesis. Steep
mid-level lapse rates will overspread the northern Great Plains
during the day, yielding most-unstable CAPE values ranging from 1000
J/kg to perhaps 3000 J/kg depending on model guidance.
However, run-to-run inconsistency in the space and time evolution of
relevant features leads to little confidence in identifying where
any overlap of thunderstorms, instability, and effective-layer shear
might support severe thunderstorms. However, if model guidance
begins to converge on potential scenarios, probabilistic delineation
may become warranted in subsequent forecasts.
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0340 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 141200Z - 191200Z
...DISCUSSION...
A surface cold front across the southern Great Plains early in the
period will quickly redevelop northward into the northern Plains in
response to strong lee cyclogenesis across the northern High Plains.
This cyclogenesis will occur in response to a positive-tilt
short-wave trough moving through the broadly zonal mid-level flow
across the northern US.
This front will move back south during the period as a seasonably
strong high pressure builds southward into the central US in the
wake of the aforementioned short-wave trough. Thunderstorms are
likely to develop in the vicinity of the front/aggregate outflow
boundary each afternoon as it moves south. However, given the lack
of significant flow amplification as the mid-level wave crosses the
northern US, it is likely that thunderstorms will remain displaced
south of the requisite effective-layer shear needed to promote an
organized severe threat identifiable at this time range.
One exception to the idea that storms will be displaced from the
better shear may take place on Monday/Day-4 across portions of North
Dakota. Here, low-level moisture will surge northward in response to
the aforementioned northern High Plains lee cyclogenesis. Steep
mid-level lapse rates will overspread the northern Great Plains
during the day, yielding most-unstable CAPE values ranging from 1000
J/kg to perhaps 3000 J/kg depending on model guidance.
However, run-to-run inconsistency in the space and time evolution of
relevant features leads to little confidence in identifying where
any overlap of thunderstorms, instability, and effective-layer shear
might support severe thunderstorms. However, if model guidance
begins to converge on potential scenarios, probabilistic delineation
may become warranted in subsequent forecasts.
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0340 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 141200Z - 191200Z
...DISCUSSION...
A surface cold front across the southern Great Plains early in the
period will quickly redevelop northward into the northern Plains in
response to strong lee cyclogenesis across the northern High Plains.
This cyclogenesis will occur in response to a positive-tilt
short-wave trough moving through the broadly zonal mid-level flow
across the northern US.
This front will move back south during the period as a seasonably
strong high pressure builds southward into the central US in the
wake of the aforementioned short-wave trough. Thunderstorms are
likely to develop in the vicinity of the front/aggregate outflow
boundary each afternoon as it moves south. However, given the lack
of significant flow amplification as the mid-level wave crosses the
northern US, it is likely that thunderstorms will remain displaced
south of the requisite effective-layer shear needed to promote an
organized severe threat identifiable at this time range.
One exception to the idea that storms will be displaced from the
better shear may take place on Monday/Day-4 across portions of North
Dakota. Here, low-level moisture will surge northward in response to
the aforementioned northern High Plains lee cyclogenesis. Steep
mid-level lapse rates will overspread the northern Great Plains
during the day, yielding most-unstable CAPE values ranging from 1000
J/kg to perhaps 3000 J/kg depending on model guidance.
However, run-to-run inconsistency in the space and time evolution of
relevant features leads to little confidence in identifying where
any overlap of thunderstorms, instability, and effective-layer shear
might support severe thunderstorms. However, if model guidance
begins to converge on potential scenarios, probabilistic delineation
may become warranted in subsequent forecasts.
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0340 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 141200Z - 191200Z
...DISCUSSION...
A surface cold front across the southern Great Plains early in the
period will quickly redevelop northward into the northern Plains in
response to strong lee cyclogenesis across the northern High Plains.
This cyclogenesis will occur in response to a positive-tilt
short-wave trough moving through the broadly zonal mid-level flow
across the northern US.
This front will move back south during the period as a seasonably
strong high pressure builds southward into the central US in the
wake of the aforementioned short-wave trough. Thunderstorms are
likely to develop in the vicinity of the front/aggregate outflow
boundary each afternoon as it moves south. However, given the lack
of significant flow amplification as the mid-level wave crosses the
northern US, it is likely that thunderstorms will remain displaced
south of the requisite effective-layer shear needed to promote an
organized severe threat identifiable at this time range.
One exception to the idea that storms will be displaced from the
better shear may take place on Monday/Day-4 across portions of North
Dakota. Here, low-level moisture will surge northward in response to
the aforementioned northern High Plains lee cyclogenesis. Steep
mid-level lapse rates will overspread the northern Great Plains
during the day, yielding most-unstable CAPE values ranging from 1000
J/kg to perhaps 3000 J/kg depending on model guidance.
However, run-to-run inconsistency in the space and time evolution of
relevant features leads to little confidence in identifying where
any overlap of thunderstorms, instability, and effective-layer shear
might support severe thunderstorms. However, if model guidance
begins to converge on potential scenarios, probabilistic delineation
may become warranted in subsequent forecasts.
Read more
2 months 1 week ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0340 AM CDT Fri Jul 11 2025
Valid 141200Z - 191200Z
...DISCUSSION...
A surface cold front across the southern Great Plains early in the
period will quickly redevelop northward into the northern Plains in
response to strong lee cyclogenesis across the northern High Plains.
This cyclogenesis will occur in response to a positive-tilt
short-wave trough moving through the broadly zonal mid-level flow
across the northern US.
This front will move back south during the period as a seasonably
strong high pressure builds southward into the central US in the
wake of the aforementioned short-wave trough. Thunderstorms are
likely to develop in the vicinity of the front/aggregate outflow
boundary each afternoon as it moves south. However, given the lack
of significant flow amplification as the mid-level wave crosses the
northern US, it is likely that thunderstorms will remain displaced
south of the requisite effective-layer shear needed to promote an
organized severe threat identifiable at this time range.
One exception to the idea that storms will be displaced from the
better shear may take place on Monday/Day-4 across portions of North
Dakota. Here, low-level moisture will surge northward in response to
the aforementioned northern High Plains lee cyclogenesis. Steep
mid-level lapse rates will overspread the northern Great Plains
during the day, yielding most-unstable CAPE values ranging from 1000
J/kg to perhaps 3000 J/kg depending on model guidance.
However, run-to-run inconsistency in the space and time evolution of
relevant features leads to little confidence in identifying where
any overlap of thunderstorms, instability, and effective-layer shear
might support severe thunderstorms. However, if model guidance
begins to converge on potential scenarios, probabilistic delineation
may become warranted in subsequent forecasts.
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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