895
FXUS63 KSGF 150504
AFDSGF
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Springfield MO
1204 AM CDT Tue Apr 15 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Dry conditions will occur today through Wednesday bringing the
potential for an elevated fire risk for fuels that have not
greened up yet this spring each day.
- A few showers and thunderstorms will be possible (35-45%)
late Wednesday into Thursday. Not all locations will be
affected.
- Warm and breezy conditions return to the region on Thursday
with highs in the 80s and southerly wind gusts up to around
35 mph.
- Unsettled weather conditions look to develop Friday into the
weekend with several rounds of showers and thunderstorms as
well as heavy rain possible at times. There are still
questions on the exact track and timing of the system.
&&
.SHORT TERM /THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 203 PM CDT Mon Apr 14 2025
Most of the clouds have cleared out now that the cold front has
moved through earlier this morning. Today has been pleasant
especially since we have a drier air mass in place which has brought
down dewpoints into the 30s which is a nice break from what we felt
on Sunday. Though, highs will still reach the upper 60s to lower 70s
by this afternoon. Tonight will be cooler as well with clear
skies and lows in the upper 30s to lower 40s.
As for Tuesday, the dry air mass really settles in bringing RH
values down to 20-25% across the area with northwesterly wind gusts
up to 20 mph. Elevated fire weather danger could be a concern
especially for areas east of Highway 65 or for areas that haven`t
quite fully greened up yet. Otherwise, expect another nice spring
day with mostly sunny skies and highs in the low to mid 60s and lows
in the upper 30s to lower 40s.
&&
.LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/...
Issued at 203 PM CDT Mon Apr 14 2025
A pattern change will occur throughout the day on Wednesday as upper
level high pressure pushes into the region. Winds become southerly
by Wednesday morning helping to slowly usher in moisture for the end
of the week. There will also be a warm front draped over the area
which will conducive for a bit of lift to occur in the warm sector.
Therefore, we have some low-end POPs (20-30%) over central MO which
coincides nicely with the Wednesday Severe Weather Outlook from SPC
which shows general thunder over those areas. Though, there will be
a cap in place during the day Wednesday that may limit any stronger
convection from occurring. There may be a few rumbles of thunder
through the day if the cap is able to be broken, but the better
chances for stronger storms will occur overnight Wednesday into
Thursday when the POPs increase to 35-45% over central MO. Soundings
and MUCAPE values look a bit better at 400-800 J/kg, but the severe
threat for this event is still low at this time.
Thursday will be windy as that pressure gradient tightens ahead of
surface low moving through the Central Plains. Expect southerly wind
gusts up to 35 mph with a few gusts possibly reaching 40 mph
especially near the I-49 corridor. The warm front will also allow
our high temperatures to soar towards the end of the week. Highs
will be in the 80s again for Thursday and Friday with dewpoints
climbing back into the mid 50s making it feel a bit too much like
summer.
Another front will move into our area later Friday into Saturday.
That front will then stall over the state for most of the weekend
until a surface low pushes it out of the area on Sunday. This low
pressure system will bring a cold front as well, though, model
guidance differs on exact timing and track of the system. There
is potential for strong to severe storms to occur across the
area along with locally heavy rainfall, but the details will be
dependent on the track/timing and structure of the system. What
we do see is that a moist air mass will be in place with model
PWATs near 1.5" which is well above our 90th percentile for this
time of year (1.13") and leans more towards our daily max
(1.41"). This means that the atmosphere will be able to hold
quite a bit a moisture and will be conducive for heavy rainfall
where these storms do occur. Right now, model guidance is
showing the higher rainfall totals over SW MO with a 20-25%
chance of seeing >3" of rain. Still a bit too early to narrow
down the exact locations and amounts of highest rainfall totals.
We`ll continue to monitor the system as it gets closer.
The placement of the front will also impact temperatures this
weekend, if the front remains to the north, the warmer conditions
would remain into the weekend with the front moving highs in the 60s
would be more likely this weekend.
&&
.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 1202 AM CDT Tue Apr 15 2025
VFR conditions through the TAF period. Northwest winds will
increase after 12Z, occasionally gusting up to 20 kt,
particularly at the SGF site. Winds calm after 00Z.
&&
.SGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
KS...None.
MO...None.
&&
$$
SHORT TERM...Soria
LONG TERM...Soria
AVIATION...Didio