SPC Forecast Products
SPC - No watches are valid as of Wed Mar 4 18:03:01 UTC 2026
Published: Wed, 04 Mar 2026 at 12:02:06 PM CST
No watches are valid as of Wed Mar 4 18:03:01 UTC 2026.

SPC - No MDs are in effect as of Wed Mar 4 18:03:01 UTC 2026
Published: Wed, 04 Mar 2026 at 12:02:05 PM CST
No Mesoscale Discussions are in effect as of Wed Mar 4 18:03:01 UTC 2026.

SPC Mar 4, 2026 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook
Published: Wed, 04 Mar 2026 at 11:37:50 AM CST
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Outlook Image
Day 2 Convective Outlook CORR 1
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1135 AM CST Wed Mar 04 2026

Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHWEST
TEXAS TO SOUTHERN KANSAS...

CORRECTED FOR HEADLINE

...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms may develop on Thursday evening and persist
into early morning Friday from northwest Texas to southern Kansas. A
few tornadoes, damaging winds, and large hail could occur.

...Synopsis...
A low-amplitude shortwave trough will quickly progress from the
Mid-MS Valley to the Northeast. A broad positive-tilt upper trough
will shift more slowly eastward across the West, reaching the
northern High Plains to Four Corners by early Friday. Downstream lee
cyclogenesis will occur over eastern CO through Thursday afternoon.
A warm front will arc southeast and eventually east from this
cyclone. A separate front will be oriented to the northeast and
north, accelerating southeast over the northern Great Plains
Thursday night. The dryline should only mix slightly east of eastern
NM into far western parts of TX.

...Southern to central Great Plains...
Deepening lee cyclogenesis over eastern CO through the day will
yield increasing low-level moisture return beneath a pronounced EML
from TX to KS. Initial severe-storm concern will develop in the late
afternoon to early evening in the TX Panhandle/northwest TX vicinity
and adjacent western OK. Guidance differs markedly with the degree
of thunderstorm development along the surface warm front as it
advances north. The HRRR/RRFS and MPAS runs are much more aggressive
compared to the NAM-Nest and NSSL-ARW cores with sustained storms.
Differential insolation/boundary-layer heating across the front and
weak mid-level height falls may be adequate for storms ahead of the
effective front/dryline intersection in the western TX Panhandle.
Should sustained development occur, a strengthening nocturnal
low-level jet will maintain an influx of low 60s surface dew points
and surface-based instability into Thursday night.

The initial setup would favor discrete supercells capable of large
hail and at least a couple tornadoes amid a supercell wind profile
and steep mid-level lapse rates. It is plausible that a
longer-track/strong supercell or two could become established to the
northeast through the evening into the early overnight in parts of
western to north-central OK. However, upscale growth into a linear
cluster with embedded supercells seems more probable into the
overnight, capable of producing all hazards. But with some weakening
of near-surface lapse rates anticipated, confidence is low on the
degree of significant severe potential with northeastward extent. 

Elevated thunderstorms appear likely to develop farther north in the
southwest/central NE vicinity and in a broader swath across the
Mid-MO Valley overnight. Isolated severe hail and strong gusts could
briefly accompany the more robust storms.

..Grams.. 03/04/2026

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SPC Mar 4, 2026 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook
Published: Wed, 04 Mar 2026 at 10:29:00 AM CST
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Outlook Image
Day 1 Convective Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1026 AM CST Wed Mar 04 2026

Valid 041630Z - 051200Z

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTH
TEXAS/EASTERN OKLAHOMA TO OZARKS AND LOWER OHIO VALLEY...

...SUMMARY...
Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are expected through
tonight from north-central Texas and eastern Oklahoma to the Ozarks
and Lower Ohio Valley. Large hail, localized wind damage, and a
tornado or two are possible.

...Southern Plains to the Ozarks and Lower Ohio Valley...
Well in advance of an amplifying trough over the Great Basin, a
low-amplitude southern-stream shortwave trough over the
south-central High Plains will continue east-northeastward over the
Lower Missouri Valley through tonight. A base-embedded modestly
increasing belt of southwesterly mid-level flow (50+ kt) will
maximize from northeast Oklahoma/southeast Kansas across the Ozarks,
in general proximity to a weak surface low/frontal zone across the
region where deep-layer/low-level shear are expected to be
maximized.

South of the front, southerly low-level flow will support dewpoints
climbing into generally the low to mid 60s F. While cloud cover may
remain semi-prevalent across the warm sector, this increasing
moisture beneath steep mid-level lapse rates amid filtered daytime
heating should support MLCAPE values generally around 1000-1500 J/kg
in a narrow corridor along/ahead of the front. Locally greater
instability should develop across north-central into central Texas
where stronger daytime heating is expected, although
deep-layer/low-level shear will be notably weaker, while still
sufficient for relatively isolated severe storms.

Across most of the Slight Risk area, effective bulk shear of 35-50
kt will easily support organized convection regionally, although
convective mode may tend to be somewhat messy given broad ascent
within the modest low-level warm advection regime near the surface
front. Additionally, ongoing mostly elevated convection this morning
across northeast Oklahoma into southern Missouri and southern
Illinois may hamper stronger heating and limit destabilization
downstream, with outflow/existing convection contributing to modal
complexity later today. 

Even with these potential limitations, a broad area of isolated to
scattered severe thunderstorm potential exists through tonight. An
isolated and/or occasional hail threat may persist with ongoing
elevated convection from southern Missouri into southern
Indiana/northern Kentucky. Surface-based thunderstorm development
should otherwise become more probable across the Ozarks into
mid/late afternoon closer to the surface front/surface low and
modifying outflow. A mix of supercells and clusters will pose a risk
for large hail. Damaging winds will also be possible where steepened
low-level lapse rates can develop with daytime heating. Although
low-level flow is not forecast to become overly strong, there should
be sufficient 0-1 km SRH to support some threat for a couple of
tornadoes with any sustained supercells/clusters, particularly
across southern Missouri and northern Arkansas.

..Guyer/Wendt.. 03/04/2026

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SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Published: Wed, 04 Mar 2026 at 10:23:16 AM CST
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook Image
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0928 AM CST Wed Mar 04 2026

Valid 041700Z - 051200Z

...NO CRITICAL AREAS...

The previous forecast remains on track. Please see the previous
discussion for details.

..Stearns/Nauslar.. 03/04/2026

.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0202 AM CST Wed Mar 04 2026/

...Synopsis...
A mid-level shortwave trough will eject northeastward across the
central Great Plains today as a more amplified upper-level trough
digs southeastward into the West. At the surface, a nearly
stationary boundary is forecast to extend from west Texas into the
Midwest and then eastward across the Mid-Atlantic. Cooler
temperatures, lighter winds, and modestly increased RH within the
post-frontal air mass will temper fire weather concerns across much
of the central and southern High Plains. A second surface cyclone
shifting southeastward from Alberta into Montana may bring a brief
period of localized downslope winds to portions of the northern High
Plains. Sustained surface winds are forecast to remain light across
any areas that do see RH values of 20% or less, however. Given the
expected poor overlap of low RH and stronger sustained wind,
widespread fire weather concerns are unlikely at this time.

...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...

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