Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted June 3, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Mon Jun 03 2024
Valid 12Z Mon Jun 03 2024 – 12Z Wed Jun 05 2024

…Excessive Rainfall and Severe Weather threaten portions of the
Mississippi Valley and Southern Plains today…

…Increasing Excessive Heat Risk potential over parts of the West and
southern Texas through mid-week…

Shortwave energy spinning through the Northwest will support showers and
thunderstorm activity across the region today. Rainfall rates over the
favored terrain of the Cascades and Northern Rockies will be high enough
to warrant an Excessive Rainfall threat. Thus, a Slight Risk (at least
15%) of Excessive Rainfall leading to Flash Flooding is in effect for
portions of the Northern Rockies, while a Marginal Risk (at least 5%) area
is in place over the Cascades, Olympics and Seattle Metro area. Elsewhere,
showers and thunderstorms are expected to continue over parts of the Great
Plains and Mississippi Valley today. Pockets of severe thunderstorms
capable of producing heavy to excessive rainfall may develop over parts of
the Southern Plains into the Mississippi Valley. Slight Risks of Excessive
Rainfall and Severe Thunderstorms are in effect over those areas, where a
swath of damaging wind gusts are possible. The severe thunderstorm threat
concentrates over parts of the Central Plains and Middle Mississippi
Valley on Tuesday, where a Slight Risk is in effect. Large hail is
possible at the outset when storms are more cellular, but will then be
followed by a congealing of cells into a line of storms with damaging wind
gusts eventually being the main threat.

An upper ridge is expected to develop over the West early to mid-week.
High temperatures will gradually climb into 100s by Wednesday and Thursday
with many records potentially being tied or broken on those days.
Excessive Heat Warnings are in effect for the central valley region of
California while Excessive Heat Watches are in effect for parts of the
Desert Southwest. Extreme HeatRisk is probable to continue for much of
southern Texas through Wednesday. This level of heat risk means that there
will likely be little to no overnight relief for those without effective
cooling and/or adequate hydration.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted June 2, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Sun Jun 02 2024
Valid 12Z Sun Jun 02 2024 – 12Z Tue Jun 04 2024

…Excessive Rainfall and Severe Thunderstorms possible over portions of
the Great Plains and Mississippi Valley…

…Heavy to Excessive Rainfall possible across parts of the Northwest
through Monday…

…Increasing Excessive Heat threat over parts of California, Nevada and
Arizona…

A series of shortwaves will be responsible for Excessive Rainfall and
Severe Thunderstorms that develop across the Great Plains and Mississippi
Valley over the next few days. Today, showers and isolated thunderstorms
will spread from the High Plains into the Mississippi Valley. Some storms
may turn severe. The Storm Prediction Center issued an Enhanced Risk
(level 3/5) of Severe Thunderstorms across portions of the Central High
Plains this afternoon and evening. Very large hail, severe wind gusts
greater than 75 mph, and a few tornadoes are expected. Rain rates in some
of those storms could be high enough to cause flash flooding which is why
there’s a Slight Risk (at least 15%) of Excessive Rainfall over parts of
the Northern/Central Plains and Upper/Middle Mississippi Valley.

Elsewhere, a deep upper low will transport anomalous tropical Pacific
moisture into the Northwest today. Excessive Rainfall is naturally a
concern over the favorable terrain of the Cascades, Bitterrroots, Salmon
River Mountains as well as the Seattle metro, where Slight Risks (at least
15%) are in effect through Monday. Monday will be a Marginal Risk kind of
day for Excessive Rainfall and Severe Thunderstorms over parts of the
Southern/Central Plains and Mississippi Valley. Cloudy/cooler conditions
will prevail over the Northwest thanks to the Atmospheric River event set
to unfold over the next couple of days. Otherwise, the Great Plains and
Northeast are likely to experience above average temperatures this week.
Abnormal heat is expected to expand across parts of the West mid-week.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted June 1, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Sat Jun 01 2024
Valid 12Z Sat Jun 01 2024 – 12Z Mon Jun 03 2024

…Excessive Rainfall threatens parts of the Central/Southern Plains,
Southeast and Mississippi/Ohio Valleys today…

…Severe Weather refocuses over the Great Plains this weekend…

…Southern Texas remains warmer than average through early next week…

A sequence of shortwave energies will support impactful weather across the
Central U.S. this weekend. Showers and thunderstorms will organize ahead
of a low pressure system over the Middle/Lower Mississippi Valley and
spread into the Southeast this morning and afternoon. Some storms may be
strong enough to produce heavy rainfall. A Slight Risk (at least 15%) of
Excessive Rainfall leading to Flash Flooding is in effect for portions of
Tennessee, Mississippi and Alabama today. Meanwhile, some dry-line storms
could turn severe over parts of the Central/Southern High Plains this
afternoon. The Storm Prediction Center issued a Slight Risk (level 2/5) of
Severe Thunderstorms for the aforementioned areas with supercells possibly
organizing into clusters and spreading into the Plains tonight. Severe
wind, hail and brief tornadoes are possible.

Another low pressure system emerging from the Rockies will bring a renewed
threat of severe weather to the Northern/Central Plains and Upper Midwest
on Sunday. A Slight Risk (level 2/5) of Severe Thunderstorms is in effect
from southeastern North Dakota to western Minnesota and down into central
Nebraska, where a line of severe storms may produce damaging wind gusts
and hail could be the main severe threats. There’s also a Slight Risk (at
least 15%) of Excessive Rainfall leading to Flash Flooding over parts of
southern Minnesota, southeastern South Dakota, eastern Nebraska and Iowa
on Sunday.

Deep upper-level troughing will bring rain and cooler temperatures to the
Pacific Northwest on Sunday. Temperatures will remain above average across
southern Texas, while warmer conditions expand across the Great Plains
through early next week. Approaching shortwave energy and an upper low
locked in just off the Northeast Coast will support warmer than average
temperatures over the Northeast for the next several days.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted May 31, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Fri May 31 2024
Valid 12Z Fri May 31 2024 – 12Z Sun Jun 02 2024

…Severe Weather and Excessive Rainfall potential across mid-section of
the country this weekend…

…Heat Risk continues over far southern Texas…

Southern stream shortwave energy will be the catalyst for severe
thunderstorm and excessive rainfall potential across parts of the Central
U.S. this weekend. Today a complex of thunderstorms will propagate from
the Central/Southern High Plains across northern and eastern Texas,
followed by another round of storms which will develop and move into parts
of Arkansas and southern Missouri this evening. The Storm Prediction
Center issued a Slight Risk (level 2/5) of Severe Thunderstorms for these
events with wind damage and an isolated tornado being the main hazard
threats. Isolated large hail and severe wind gusts will be possible over
the Central High Plains. There’s also a Slight Risk (at least 15%) of
Excessive Rainfall leading to Flash Flooding over portions of the
Middle/Lower Mississippi Valley and eastern Oklahoma/Texas. There’s still
plenty of uncertainty as to where exactly storms will initiate and be most
impactful.

The focus for showers and thunderstorms shifts into the Lower Mississippi
and Ohio Valleys on Saturday. Another complex of storms may propagate into
the central Gulf Coast beginning in the morning. Some of these storms may
be efficient enough rain producers to warrant another Slight Risk of
Excessive Rainfall over much of Mississippi and Alabama. The Storm
Prediction Center has another Slight Risk of Severe Thunderstorms along
the Central to Southern High Plains where supercells capable of producing
severe wind, hail and a couple of brief tornadoes could impact the region
Saturday afternoon.

Elsewhere, heat risk continues to be a concern over south Texas through
the weekend. Convection over the Central U.S. will lead to below average
high temperatures today. Troughing in the West will support above average
temperatures across much of the region this weekend. A deep upper-level
low will arrive over the Pacific Northwest on Sunday, bringing with it the
potential for heavy rainfall

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted May 30, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Thu May 30 2024
Valid 12Z Thu May 30 2024 – 12Z Sat Jun 01 2024

…More active weather across the mid sections of the nation, with
additional rounds of thunderstorms, heavy rains, flash flooding and severe
weather…

…Heat to continue across the Southwest to South Texas and much of
Florida, while building across the inland valleys of California…

…Cooler than average temperatures for the Plains and large portions of
the eastern U.S. through early this weekend…

A tumultuous weather pattern sparking several rounds of robust
thunderstorms is set to continue throughout much of the central and
south-central United States. The atmospheric ingredients in play for the
next serving of severe weather include an upper trough with embedded
shortwaves crossing the Rockies today, multiple frontal boundaries draped
across the Great Plains, and ample atmospheric moisture content lifting
northward from the western Gulf of Mexico. Additionally, a reemerging
dryline over the southern High Plains will help spark strong storms this
afternoon that are forecast to progress eastward tonight over the southern
Plains. These thunderstorms may contain large hail and damaging wind
gusts, with the locations most likely impacted including the Texas
Panhandle and parts of west Texas. A broader threat for isolated severe
weather stretches throughout a majority of the central and southern
Plains. Intense rainfall rates are also possible and can lead to flash
flooding where storm motions are slow. Currently, the scattered flash
flood threat includes much of the central/southern Plains and ArkLaTex
region. The active weather and clusters of redeveloping thunderstorms are
then forecast to gradually slide eastward on Friday as an area of low
pressure pushes across the Red River Valley of the South. Additional
chances for damaging wind gusts and large hail exists across central and
eastern Texas, as well as into the Lower Mississippi Valley. Flash
flooding also remains a concern for the last day of May across the
southern Plains and Lower Mississippi Valley. Wet weather is anticipated
to expand to start the weekend, but with less focus for severe weather as
thunderstorm chances stretch from the Ohio/Tennessee valleys to the Great
Plains.

Storminess over the central U.S. will keep high temperatures below average
to end the week, while a potent high pressure system over the Lower Great
Lakes and Ohio Valley also offers refreshing afternoon temperatures in the
70s for large sections of the Eastern United States. Summer heat will be
continue to be found across the Southwest and Southern Tier. Muggy highs
into the mid-90s are forecast across the central/southern Florida
Peninsula until a cold front enters on Saturday and offers some much
needed relief in the form of persistent northeasterly flow. Upper 90s and
low 100s are anticipated to stretch from the Southwest to far western and
southern Texas through the weekend. Heat will actually build further north
into the Great Basin and interior California valleys as well, but not
quite warm enough to approach daily records. If spending time outdoors in
these regions, be sure to follow proper heat safety.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted May 29, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Wed May 29 2024
Valid 12Z Wed May 29 2024 – 12Z Fri May 31 2024

…Active central U.S. weather pattern to continue, with heavy rains,
flash flooding, and severe weather possible…

…Anomalous heat continues across far southern Texas and Florida, while
hot temperatures begin to build in the Southwest and interior California
Valleys…

The active and stormy weather pattern impacting the central U.S. is set to
continue over the next few days while also expanding in coverage to
include much of the Great Plains, middle and lower Mississippi Valley. For
today, a cold front progressing across the Northern Rockies and central
Great Basin in response to a Northwest upper trough will help spark
numerous thunderstorms into the northern Plains and parts of the central
High Plains. A few scattered storms could contain intense rainfall rates,
hail, and damaging winds. Scattered thunderstorms are also possible along
a lingering stationary front extending along the Gulf Coast and southern
Plains, which have greater chances of producing instances of flash
flooding due to thunderstorms overlapping with saturated ground
conditions. As upper troughing enters the Great Plains on Thursday, even
more rounds of slow-moving tumultuous thunderstorm clusters are
anticipated. This leads to a broad region at risk for hail, damaging
winds, and flash flooding from Kansas and eastern Colorado to
north-central Texas. This activity is then forecast to gradually slide
eastward on Friday to impact the ArkLaTex region, as well as extending
into the mid-Mississippi Valley and southern Plains once again. Flash
flooding will remain a concern due to the relatively slow-moving nature of
thunderstorms occurring within a moisture rich environment. Widespread
areal-averaged rainfall totals by the end of the week are forecast to add
up to over 2 inches throughout much of Kansas, Oklahoma, northern Texas,
southern Arkansas, and northern Louisiana, with localized amounts over 4
inches possible.

Simmering heat is expected to continue for much of the central and
southern Florida Peninsula as highs reach into the mid-90s, which may
tied/break daily record highs today. Highs also returning to the upper 90s
are forecast along the Rio Grande Valley of southern Texas after early
morning thunderstorms. However, a larger area of hot weather will begin to
build throughout the Southwest and interior California valleys by the end
of the week. Afternoon temperatures into the upper 90s and triple digits
can be expected.

Elsewhere, high pressure stretching from the Great Lakes to the Southeast
will keep most areas east of the Mississippi River dry with the exception
of the Ohio Valley, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast today. A compact storm
system will be swinging eastward over the Mid-Atlantic and produce
scattered showers and thunderstorms. The main weather hazards associated
with these storms are forecast to be associated with lighting and locally
heavy rain.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted May 28, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Tue May 28 2024
Valid 12Z Tue May 28 2024 – 12Z Thu May 30 2024

…Numerous strong to severe thunderstorms and areas of flash flooding
likely across portions of northern and central Texas today…

…Unsettled weather with thunderstorms and heavy rain possible over the
northern Great Basin/Rockies today before shifting into the northern High
Plains on Wednesday…

…Sweltering heat continues across parts of South Texas and southern
Florida…

The Lone Star State will be the focus for active weather today as strong
thunderstorms develop along a southern High Plains dryline and lingering
stationary front. Ample atmospheric moisture content and instability will
support the likelihood of storms containing significant damaging wind
gusts and very large hail. Ongoing thunderstorms along the Red River
Valley of the South are expected to continue through the morning hours
before numerous additional storms form across western and north-central
Texas by the afternoon. Merging cells and clusters of storms are also
likely to contain intense rainfall rates capable of triggering several
flash floods, particularly for areas just west of Dallas-Fort Worth and
north of Austin. The threat of scattered flash flooding and severe
thunderstorms includes a much larger region extending from the Texas
Panhandle to the western Gulf Coast. For the overnight timeframe, heavy
rain and severe weather chances are forecast to gradually decrease and
slide eastward within Texas. Residents and visitors are reminded to remain
weather aware, have numerous ways to receive warnings and never drive
across flooded roadways.

A cold front progressing across the Northwest, northern Great Basin, and
northern Rockies today will provide enough forcing to produce the
potential for scattered severe thunderstorms capable of containing
damaging wind gusts for parts of northeast Oregon, northern/central Idaho,
and western Montana. A few storms may also produce heavy rain and isolated
flash flooding. This area of unsettled weather is expected to swing
eastward by midweek and enter the north-central High Plains before an
expanding area of storminess returns to the central/southern Plains on
Thursday.

Elsewhere, cold air advection on the southwestern periphery of an eastern
Canada low pressure system will produce scattered areas of showers and
storms over the next few days from the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest to
the Ohio Valley, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast. A few storms could contain
hail and brief damaging winds today from southern Wisconsin to northern
Illinois and northwest Indiana.

The heat plaguing much of the Gulf Coast and southern Texas is finally
abating, but will linger across parts of southern Texas today with heat
indices up to 115 degrees. High temperatures are also expected to remain
above average and near daily record highs throughout the central and
southern Florida Peninsula over the next few days.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted May 27, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Mon May 27 2024
Valid 12Z Mon May 27 2024 – 12Z Wed May 29 2024

…Severe thunderstorms and areas of heavy rain to impact much of the
eastern U.S., with isolated severe weather possible in the southern
Plains…

…Dangerous heat remains in place this Memorial Day throughout
southern/central Texas, the western and central Gulf Coast, as well as
southern Florida before some gradual relief by midweek…

…Unsettled weather and thunderstorms return to the southern Plains on
Tuesday, as well as the northern Great Basin and northern Rockies…

The severe weather threat shifts eastward today along a cold front
extending southward from a low pressure system forecast to slide northeast
over the Great Lakes. Ongoing storms stretching from the upper Ohio Valley
to the lower Mississippi Valley are expected to weaken this morning, but
redevelopment is likely this afternoon along and ahead of this boundary.
Clusters of merging thunderstorms are possible in the Mid-Atlantic and
Northeast, which may also contain intense rainfall rates. This heavy rain
could lead to scattered instances of flash flooding from northeast
Maryland to the Catskill Mountains of New York, where a Slight Risk (level
2/4) of Excessive Rainfall is in effect through tonight. The severe
weather threat includes a broader region extending from the lower Great
Lakes to the Southeast, with damaging wind gusts and hail the primary
hazards, with isolated tornadoes possible in the eastern Mid-Atlantic. As
the cold front extends westward towards the southern Plains, a few
isolated severe thunderstorms are also possible in parts of central and
eastern Texas.

South of the cold front in parts of Texas, the Gulf Coast, and southern
Florida, oppressive and dangerous heat continues today. Highs into the
upper 90s and triple digits are forecast throughout much of the Lone Star
State, with a few daily record highs possible. Elevated humidity levels
will lead to heat indices up to 120 degrees across portions of southern
Texas. Excessive Heat Warnings and Heat Advisories are in effect from
south-central Texas to the central Gulf Coast. Additionally, a simmering
Memorial Day is also in store for parts of the Florida Peninsula, where
daily record highs could be tied/broken in Key West, Port St Lucie, and
Melbourne. Summer heat is expected to linger over the Sunshine state
through midweek, while gradual cooling enters the Gulf Coast and Texas as
an approaching cold front inches towards the region. Residents are
reminded to follow proper heat safety and check on the vulnerable
population over at least the next few days.

The next round of active weather should return to the southern Plains on
Tuesday as scattered thunderstorms impact parts of southeast New Mexico
and much of Texas near a lingering stationary front. Severe wind gusts and
large hail are possible, as well as heavy rain producing scattered areas
of flash flooding. Meanwhile, a separate area of thunderstorms is possible
along a cold front as it progresses from the northern Great Basin on
Tuesday into the northern High Plains on Wednesday. Isolated thunderstorms
could turn severe and contain intense rainfall rates in these regions.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted May 26, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Sun May 26 2024
Valid 12Z Sun May 26 2024 – 12Z Tue May 28 2024

…Severe weather and heavy rain chances shift into the Mid-Mississippi,
Ohio and Tennessee valleys today before progressing into the Mid-Atlantic,
Southeast, and Gulf Coast on Memorial Day…

…Dangerous and potentially record-breaking heat continues across parts
of Texas, the western Gulf Coast, and southern Florida…

…Active weather returns to the southern Plains on Tuesday with
additional chances for severe weather and flash flooding…

An organizing storm system over the central U.S. is responsible for
numerous thunderstorms stretching from Kansas/Missouri to the Edwards
Plateau of Texas. Boundaries aiding this convection include a dryline
extending southward through the southern Plains and a slowly lifting warm
front stretching from the central Plains through the Ohio Valley. Current
storms are expected to grow upscale and merge into a larger complex of
thunderstorms by morning while swinging through parts of Missouri,
Illinois, western Kentucky, and neighboring states. Damaging wind gusts,
large hail, and tornadoes are possible. Additionally, heavy rain may lead
to scattered instances of flash flooding with this initial burst of
thunderstorms. By the afternoon hours another round of showers and
thunderstorms are expected to develop along a cold front and impact
similar regions, with the severe threat shifting further east across the
Ohio Valley overnight. More chances for all modes of severe weather are
possible, with repeating storms potentially increasing the flash flooding
threat throughout parts of Kentucky and Tennessee. Area of heavy rain may
also lead to flash flooding concerns near the low pressure center as it
progresses toward southern Wisconsin tonight.

As the center of the storm system enters the Great Lakes on Monday and the
attached cold front extends from the Ohio Valley to the southern Plains,
severe weather and heavy rain chances will focus along the eastern U.S.
and Gulf Coast States. More specifically, the greatest chances for intense
rainfall rates leading to flash flooding exists across eastern
Pennsylvania and neighboring section of southeast New York and northwest
New Jersey, where a Slight Risk (level 2/4) of Excessive Rainfall is in
effect on Memorial Day. Severe thunderstorms are most likely across the
Mid-Atlantic as well as an area stretching from the Lower Mississippi
Valley to the Southeast. Damaging wind gusts and hail are the primary
potential hazards. Residents and visitors planning to enjoy outdoor
holiday barbecues and parties should remain weather aware and have
multiple ways to receive warnings.

Oppressive and potentially dangerous heat is set to continue for at least
the next few days throughout parts of southern Texas, the lower
Mississippi Valley, and southern Florida. Highs are expected to reach well
into the 90s for the southern Plains and western Gulf Coast, with triple
digits across southern portions of Texas. Elevated humidity levels will
make it feel even hotter, with heat indices approaching 115 degrees. Daily
record highs are also possible in this region and extending to southern
Florida as well through Tuesday. Residents and visitors are urged to
follow proper heat safety by staying hydrated, taking breaks inside
buildings with air conditioning, as well as checking on the vulnerable
population. Above average and summer-like temperatures will also extend
towards the eastern U.S. today as well before slightly cooler weather
arrives behind a cold front on Tuesday. Conversely, a warm up is on the
way throughout the West as upper ridging builds and spreads highs into the
70s and 80s for the northern Great Basin and northern High Plains.

Meanwhile, the next round of active weather is set to impact the southern
Plains on Tuesday as a lingering frontal boundary and favorable upper jet
dynamics spark developing thunderstorms from western Oklahoma/Kansas to
Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley. Scattered instances of flash
flooding are possible, which is highlighted by a Slight Risk of Excessive
Rainfall throughout central and north-central Texas, as well as southern
Oklahoma. Some storms in the southern High Plains may also become strong
enough to produce damaging wind gusts and large hail.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.

Today Through the Fourth Friday (22 to 28 days) Weather Outlook for the U.S. and a Six-Day Forecast for the World: posted May 25, 2024

This article focuses on what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. The article also includes weather maps for longer-term U.S. outlooks and a six-day World weather outlook which can be very useful for travelers.

First the NWS Short Range Forecast. The afternoon NWS text update can be found here after about 4 p.m. New York time but it is unlikely to have changed very much from the morning update. The images in this article automatically update.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
Sat May 25 2024
Valid 12Z Sat May 25 2024 – 12Z Mon May 27 2024

…Dangerous severe weather threat forecast across parts of the
central/southern Plains through tonight before the potential for strong
storms shift to the mid-Mississippi and Ohio valleys on Sunday…

…Extreme fire weather expected for south-central New Mexico with
critical fire weather throughout much of the southern Rockies/High Plains
today…

…Simmering heat continues across South Texas, the Gulf Coast, and
southern Florida through Memorial Day…

The start of this Memorial Day weekend will feature yet another round of
severe weather impacting the central United States as the next storm
system strengthens across the central Plains. A textbook Great Plains
severe weather setup is expected as a warm front lifts to the central
Plains and middle Mississippi Valley while a sharp dryline extends south
of the low into the southern Plains. Discrete supercells are anticipated
to develop this evening in response to an ejecting shortwave out of the
Rockies as aforementioned surface boundaries provide a focus for
developing thunderstorms. A few supercells may be capable of intense
tornadoes, with giant hail and destructive winds also expected. By
tonight, thunderstorms are expected to merge into clusters and potentially
bow echos as they push eastward towards the Ozarks. The Storm Prediction
Center has issued a Moderate Risk (level 4/5) for severe thunderstorms in
parts of Kansas, Oklahoma, and far southwest Missouri. Additionally,
storms are expected to contain intense rainfall rates that could lead to
scattered instances of flash flooding from the central/southern Plains to
the mid-Mississippi Valley into tonight. The low pressure system and
associated storminess are expected to shift eastward on Sunday into
portions of the Midwest and Ohio Valley. Damaging wind gusts are the most
likely hazards as a complex of thunderstorms progress from Missouri to
Kentucky, as well as the possibility of flash flooding, hail, and a few
tornadoes. The Memorial Day finale for this spring storm system will
impact the eastern U.S. on Monday as low pressure swings into the Great
Lakes and a strong cold front extends along the Appalachians. Showers and
storms may dampen outdoor barbecues, while also containing frequent
lighting, have rain, and gusty winds. Residents and visitors should remain
weather aware this holiday weekend and have multiple ways of receiving
warnings.

West of the dryline today throughout the southern High Plains and southern
Rockies will exist extremely critical fire weather conditions. Low
relative humidity, gusty winds, and dry vegetation could lead to any newly
formed fires to spread rapidly. Red Flag Warnings span throughout all of
New Mexico, southeast Arizona, western Texas, and the western Oklahoma
Panhandle.

The temperature outlook for this weekend includes above average
temperatures leading to a summer-like feel for much of the eastern U.S.,
Mid-South, and central/southern Plains as heat also begins to build back
into the West by Memorial Day. Cooler temperatures are forecast to remain
over the Rockies, Northwest, and north-central United States. Heat will
reach oppressive levels across South Texas, the Gulf Coast, and southern
Florida, with heat indices into the triple digits and the potential for
daily record highs. Excessive Heat Warnings remain in effect across South
Texas due to heat indices rising to around 115 degrees, which could be
dangerous for those spending extended amounts of time outdoors.

To get your local forecast plus active alerts and warnings click HERE and enter your city, state or zip code.

Learn about wave patterns HERE.

Then, looking at the world and of course, the U.S. shows here also. Today we are looking at precipitation.

Please click on “Read More” below to access the full Daily Report issued today.