Tropical Storm Dalila Forecast Advisory Number 9

2 months 1 week ago
Issued at 2100 UTC SAT JUN 14 2025 582 WTPZ24 KNHC 142032 TCMEP4 TROPICAL STORM DALILA FORECAST/ADVISORY NUMBER 9 NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL EP042025 2100 UTC SAT JUN 14 2025 TROPICAL STORM CENTER LOCATED NEAR 16.8N 105.5W AT 14/2100Z POSITION ACCURATE WITHIN 30 NM PRESENT MOVEMENT TOWARD THE WEST-NORTHWEST OR 300 DEGREES AT 9 KT ESTIMATED MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE 993 MB MAX SUSTAINED WINDS 55 KT WITH GUSTS TO 65 KT. 50 KT....... 40NE 40SE 0SW 0NW. 34 KT.......130NE 90SE 120SW 90NW. 4 M SEAS....210NE 270SE 105SW 120NW. WINDS AND SEAS VARY GREATLY IN EACH QUADRANT. RADII IN NAUTICAL MILES ARE THE LARGEST RADII EXPECTED ANYWHERE IN THAT QUADRANT. REPEAT...CENTER LOCATED NEAR 16.8N 105.5W AT 14/2100Z AT 14/1800Z CENTER WAS LOCATED NEAR 16.6N 104.9W FORECAST VALID 15/0600Z 17.4N 106.7W MAX WIND 50 KT...GUSTS 60 KT. 50 KT... 20NE 20SE 0SW 0NW. 34 KT... 80NE 70SE 90SW 70NW. FORECAST VALID 15/1800Z 17.8N 108.7W MAX WIND 45 KT...GUSTS 55 KT. 34 KT... 50NE 50SE 30SW 40NW. FORECAST VALID 16/0600Z 17.9N 110.8W...POST-TROPICAL MAX WIND 35 KT...GUSTS 45 KT. 34 KT... 30NE 30SE 20SW 20NW. FORECAST VALID 16/1800Z 17.9N 112.6W...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW MAX WIND 25 KT...GUSTS 35 KT. FORECAST VALID 17/0600Z 17.9N 114.1W...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW MAX WIND 20 KT...GUSTS 30 KT. FORECAST VALID 17/1800Z...DISSIPATED REQUEST FOR 3 HOURLY SHIP REPORTS WITHIN 300 MILES OF 16.8N 105.5W INTERMEDIATE PUBLIC ADVISORY...WTNT34 KNHC/MIATCPEP4...AT 15/0000Z NEXT ADVISORY AT 15/0300Z $$ FORECASTER GIBBS/KELLY
NHC Webmaster

Tropical Storm Dalila Public Advisory Number 9

2 months 1 week ago
Issued at 300 PM CST Sat Jun 14 2025 583 WTPZ34 KNHC 142032 TCPEP4 BULLETIN Tropical Storm Dalila Advisory Number 9 NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL EP042025 300 PM CST Sat Jun 14 2025 ...DALILA CONTINUES TO IMPACT SOUTHWESTERN MEXICO... SUMMARY OF 300 PM CST...2100 UTC...INFORMATION ---------------------------------------------- LOCATION...16.8N 105.5W ABOUT 170 MI...275 KM SSW OF MANZANILLO MEXICO MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...65 MPH...100 KM/H PRESENT MOVEMENT...WNW OR 300 DEGREES AT 10 MPH...17 KM/H MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...993 MB...29.33 INCHES WATCHES AND WARNINGS -------------------- CHANGES WITH THIS ADVISORY: None. SUMMARY OF WATCHES AND WARNINGS IN EFFECT: A Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for... * Tecpan De Galeana to Cabo Corrientes A Tropical Storm Warning means that tropical storm conditions are expected somewhere within the warning area within 36 hours. For storm information specific to your area, please monitor products issued by your national meteorological service. DISCUSSION AND OUTLOOK ---------------------- At 300 PM CST (2100 UTC), the center of Tropical Storm Dalila was located near latitude 16.8 North, longitude 105.5 West. Dalila is moving toward the west-northwest near 10 mph (17 km/h). A gradual westward turn is expected later tonight into Sunday. On the forecast track, the center of Dalila is forecast to remain offshore the southwestern coast of Mexico. Recent satellite-derived wind data indicate that maximum sustained winds have increased to near 65 mph (100 km/h) with higher gusts. Dalila is likely near its peak intensity and will gradually begin to weaken by Sunday. Tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 150 miles (240 km) from the center. The estimated minimum central pressure is 993 mb (29.33 inches). HAZARDS AFFECTING LAND ---------------------- Key messages for Tropical Storm Dalila can be found in the Tropical Cyclone Discussion under AWIPS header MIATCDEP4 and WMO header WTPZ44 KNHC. RAINFALL: Additional rainfall amounts of 2 to 4 inches are expected across portions of the Mexican states of Michoacán and Guerrero through Sunday morning, with localized storm totals up to 9 inches near the coast. This rainfall will lead to areas of flooding and mudslides, especially in areas of steep terrain near the coast. For a complete depiction of forecast rainfall associated with Tropical Storm Dalila, please see the National Weather Service Storm Total Rainfall Graphic available at hurricanes.gov/graphics_ep4.shtml?rainqpf WIND: Tropical storm conditions are expected within the warning area through tonight. SURF: Swells generated by Tropical Storm Dalila will affect portions of the coast of southwestern Mexico during the next couple of days. These swells are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions. Please consult products from your local weather office. NEXT ADVISORY ------------- Next intermediate advisory at 600 PM CST. Next complete advisory at 900 PM CST. $$ Forecaster Gibbs/Kelly
NHC Webmaster

SPC MD 1286

2 months 1 week ago
MD 1286 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH POSSIBLE FOR EASTERN WYOMING...NORTHERN COLORADO...AND PORTIONS OF EASTERN NEBRASKA AND SOUTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA
Mesoscale Discussion 1286 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0157 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Areas affected...Eastern Wyoming...northern Colorado...and portions of eastern Nebraska and southeastern South Dakota Concerning...Severe potential...Watch possible Valid 141857Z - 142030Z Probability of Watch Issuance...60 percent SUMMARY...A severe thunderstorm watch may be needed this afternoon and evening across portions of the Central High Plains in anticipation of severe thunderstorms capable of large hail and damaging winds. DISCUSSION...While surface mesoanalsyis indicates lingering convective inhibition across portions of the Colorado and Wyoming High Plains, heating across the higher terrain has resulted in surface temperatures reaching the lower 80s F with several attempts at thunderstorm initiation. As the boundary layer continues to mix and destabilize, the expectation is that storms will move from the higher terrain into the high plains of Colorado and Wyoming where better mixing ratios of 12-13 g/kg are present. Relatively meager deep-layer shear of 20-30 kts will limit overall convective organization, but steep mid-level lapse rates and deep, well-mixed boundary layer profiles will support a large hail and damaging wind threat -- especially with any local convective organization into bowing segments. ..Halbert/Thompson.. 06/14/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...LBF...UNR...GLD...BOU...CYS...BYZ...RIW... LAT...LON 44980477 44990625 44980705 44970750 44110697 43250641 42660597 41940547 41220521 40520503 39830478 39750417 39760333 39830244 39990203 40270206 42520290 44970413 44980477 MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...UP TO 95 MPH MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...65-80 MPH MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...1.50-2.50 IN Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more

SPC Jun 14, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 1 week ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0254 PM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025 Valid 142000Z - 151200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MONTANA INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND FROM SOUTHERN KANSAS INTO CENTRAL OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and damaging wind gusts will be possible across parts of the northern and central High Plains this afternoon and evening. Large hail and damaging winds will also be possible this afternoon from eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas, and late tonight from southern Kansas into central/northeast Oklahoma. ...20z Update... The previous forecast largely remains on track with only minor adjustments made to account for recent convective trends. ...Western Arkansas... A loosely organized MCS continues to move across western AR, and while GOES IR imagery continues to show deep/robust updraft development, MRMS echo top imagery over the past couple of hours reveals that these updrafts have been fairly transient, likely owing to weak deep-layer wind shear. The MCS will likely continue to move east/southeast towards southwestern AR through peak heating and may be capable of damaging winds, but given the recent trends, 15% wind/Slight risk probabilities have been removed from western AR. ...Oklahoma... An outflow boundary is noted in visible imagery and surface observations from south-central OK to western OK. This boundary is sufficiently displaced from the upper cirrus associated with the MCS to the east to yield surface temperatures in the 80s on the cool side of the boundary. Consequently, a corridor of southeasterly low-level flow and MLCAPE upwards of 2500-3000 J/kg is in place across southwest/western OK and could be a preferential corridor for a supercell or two later this evening. Latest CAM guidance has hinted at this possibility, but solutions continue to vary. Additional convection along and north of this boundary remains likely later tonight as the nocturnal jet strengthens and isentropic ascent increases. Continued re-development of elevated convection across north-central OK casts some uncertainty on where initiation later tonight is most likely, and may result in more focused convection along and west of the I-35 corridor. Here again, CAM solutions have not captured recent convective trends well and show some variance in the exact evolution. Regardless, 15% hail/wind probabilities have been shifted westward to account for these trends. ...Central to Northern High Plains... The early stages of convective initiation are underway across central to eastern WY with further development and intensification expected through the evening. See MCD #1286 for additional details. ..Moore.. 06/14/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Sat Jun 14 2025/ ...KS/OK/AR this afternoon through tonight... Convection is ongoing this morning in several clusters from southeast KS into central and eastern OK. The KS cluster had the better defined cold pool and MCV this morning, but has weakened while moving into the areas of rain-cooled air in the immediate wake of the OK convection. The environment downstream into AR could support some continuation of the eastern OK storms that have intensified recently, with an attendant threat for occasional wind damage and isolated large hail with multicell clusters. The convectively-enhanced midlevel trough will remain over eastern KS into tonight, when a southwesterly low-level jet is expected to develop as the low levels recover in the wake of this morning's storms. Related increases in low-level warm advection will support new thunderstorm development tonight in roughly the same areas being impacted by the weakening storms this morning, and an MCS could evolve in this warm advection zone overnight. An environment with steep midlevel lapse rates, large CAPE, and some enhancement to low-midlevel vertical shear will favor the potential for large hail, severe outflow gusts and a low chance for a couple of tornadoes. ...MT/central High Plains late this afternoon into late evening... Subtle height rises are expected over the High Plains and MT, with the stronger mid-upper flow confined mostly to MT. Forcing for ascent will likewise be relatively weak, with some upslope flow component along and east of a lee trough. At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected east/northeast of the higher terrain from eastern WY into northeast CO, and potentially along the baroclinic zone across central MT. A few supercells will be possible with large hail from MT into eastern WY, though storms with southward extent will have more of a threat for severe outflow gusts based on a tendency to grow upscale on merging outflow in an environment with steep lapse rates and deep-layer vertical shear that will be close to the lower margins for sustained supercells. There will be some potential for a cluster or two to persist overnight while spreading eastward over the High Plains. ...Mid-Atlantic to the southern Appalachians this afternoon... Along and south of a stalled front from southern DE into northern MD/VA, surface heating is ongoing in cloud breaks. As surface temperatures warm into the 80s with 72-74 F dewpoints, MLCAPE will increase to near 2000 J/kg this afternoon. Modest enhancement to vertical shear (effective bulk shear of 25-30 kt) with subtle perturbations crossing the Appalachians could allow for some clustering of storms with the potential for isolated wind damage. Scattered thunderstorms are expected farther southwest into the southern Appalachians and vicinity, immediately east of the slowly weakening midlevel trough over KY/TN. Moderate buoyancy, DCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg and roughly 30 kt midlevel flow could be sufficient for isolated downbursts with associated wind damage. Read more