
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0216 AM CDT Tue Mar 10 2026 Valid 111200Z - 121200Z ...Synopsis... Split mid-level flow over the CONUS will gradually recombine as the southern-stream trough merges with the northern trough over the Midwest and Appalachians D2/Wed. Ridging will intensify over the West as a cold front will sweep southeastward with a much cooler air mass and gusty northerly winds likely behind it. Some fire-weather potential remains possible over the southern and central Plains where drier and windy conditions are possible. However, forecast uncertainty is high. ...Central and southern High Plains... A modestly dry post-frontal air mass is likely to develop across the High Plains D2/Wednesday afternoon. While RH values will not be overly low (generally above 30%) gusty northerly winds of 20-30 mph and higher gusts are expected from southern NE into western KS and TX/OK. This may support brief elevated fire-weather conditions, especially across parts of the southern Plains. Generally the overlap of gusty winds and RH below criteria appears minimal with humidity quickly increasing through the day as colder air filters south. Additionally, the potential for precipitation from the prior day casts significant uncertainty on the potential for sustained elevated conditions. However, the strengthen of the northerly winds and some drying appears conducive to a few hours of elevated fire-weather potential in the southern High Plains where precipitation and cooler air should be minimized. Expansion is possible in subsequent outlooks, pending precipitation and frontal timing. ..Lyons.. 03/10/2026 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more

Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0215 AM CDT Tue Mar 10 2026 Valid 101200Z - 111200Z ...Synopsis... An upper low over northern Mexico will eject eastward into the southern Plains as a second upper trough moves over the northern Plains into the Midwest. At the surface, a lee cyclone will intensify and move eastward across parts of KS/OK dragging a trailing dryline with it over parts of the southern Plains. East of the dryline, rich low-level moisture and widespread showers/thunderstorms are expected. Dry and breezy conditions behind the dryline and east of the upper low appear likely to support some fire-weather potential. Isolated dry thunderstorms are also possible where lightning may interact with dry fuels over the southern High Plains. ...Southern High Plains... As the upper low ejects eastward, the initial surface cyclone will move away to the northeast along the front. A secondary lee low will deepen over KS/OK at the apex of the dryline. This, along with strong flow aloft, will support gusty southwest winds across much of the southern High Plains. While humidity is unlikely to be overly low owing to cloud cover and mid-level moisture from the cold core upper low over NM, pockets of strong heating and downslope flow west of the dryline will support 20-30% RH values amid westerly wind of 20-30 mph. Elevated and brief critical fire-weather conditions are likely from the Rio Grande Valley northward across much of West TX and far eastern NM despite the modest RH minimums. Confidence in brief critical conditions is highest across the TX Big Bend region and the southern TX Panhandle where locally higher winds and lower RH may briefly overlap this afternoon. Thunderstorm development is probable this afternoon across much of the southern Plains along the dryline and beneath the upper low over parts of central NM. Precipitable water values, indicative of moisture above a dry sub-cloud layer, range from 0.5 to 0.8 of an inch and are not expected to support efficient rainfall accumulation given storm motions of 30-40 knots. While confidence in storms is relatively high, the exact coverage, and dryline position remain uncertain. The IsoDryT area was expanded slightly to the west/southwest to account for additional convection on the periphery of the upper low. Additional changes are likely in the day1 update as dryline placement and thunderstorm coverage/location details become clearer. ..Lyons.. 03/10/2026 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more

Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0138 AM CDT Tue Mar 10 2026 Valid 121200Z - 131200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorm potential is not expected on Thursday. ...Synopsis... An upper trough will pivot east across the eastern U.S. on Thursday. A surface low located over New England will lift northeast into the Canadian Maritimes, while a trailing surface cold front moves across the Eastern Seaboard and Southeast. Showers and thunderstorms will be ongoing along the front Thursday morning. While a moist airmass will exist ahead of this activity across the Southeast into the eastern Carolinas, limited heating and poor lapse rates will preclude stronger destabilization (MLCAPE less than 500 J/kg expected). This should largely limit severe potential ahead of the front. The front should move offshore the Carolinas and northern FL into the central Gulf by mid to late afternoon. Some thunderstorm potential will persist across the FL Peninsula, but severe storms are not expected. ..Leitman.. 03/10/2026Read more

Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0100 AM CDT Tue Mar 10 2026 Valid 111200Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE ARKLATEX AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY NORTHEAST THROUGH THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID-ATLANTIC... ...SUMMARY... Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are expected on Wednesday from the ArkLaTex and Lower Mississippi Valley northeastward through the Ohio Valley vicinity. ...ArkLaTex to Ohio Valley/Mid-Atlantic... A messy scenario is evident heading into Wednesday from east Texas northeast into PA/MD/VA. A northern stream upper trough will develop east across the Great Lakes/Midwest, while a southern stream shortwave trough moves across TX and the Lower MS Valley. A broad swath of strong southwesterly deep layer flow will overspread these areas, with a particularly strong jet max across the Ohio Valley (80-100 kt at 500 mb). At the surface, a cold front will be oriented from southern Lower MI into central OK Wednesday morning. A dryline/Pacific front will then extend southward across east-central TX. A surface cyclone is expected to deepen as it moves northeast near the international border and Lower Great Lakes through Wednesday evening. As this occurs, the surface cold front will develop southeast, eventually overtaking the TX dryline during the afternoon. This front will become oriented from the Mid-Atlantic coast to the central Gulf coast by Thursday morning. Ahead of the surface boundaries, a broad warm sector will be in place, with surface dewpoints into the 60s F as far north as PA. The strongest instability will likely be focused across the Lower MS Valley where dewpoints into the mid/upper 60s F are possible and at least some stronger surface heating will be possible. With northward extent, instability will decrease, but MLCAPE up to 500-1000 J/kg will be common across the Ohio Valley into VA. One of the main concerns/points of uncertainty precluding higher probabilities across the Ohio Valley vicinity is possible ongoing convection during the morning, and multiple rounds of convection within the broad warm advection regime limiting lapse rates/instability and greater severe potential. Nevertheless, intense deep-layer southwesterly flow will support damaging wind potential across a broad area and an outlook upgrade was considered for parts of southeast OH/northeast KY/southwest PA and western/northern WV. If enough destabilization occurs and a strongly forced line of convection develops, damaging gusts and a few tornadoes could occur. Further south into the ArkLaTex and Lower MS Valley vicinity, a line of convection is expected to be ongoing Wednesday morning. Deep-layer flow will not be as strong compared to further north, but still more than adequate for organized convection. Lapse rates are forecast to remain modest, but linear convection along the surging cold front will pose an all-hazards severe risk. Some forecast guidance suggests discrete convection could develop ahead of the line. If this occurs, some increased risk for tornadoes will develop, especially as storms merge with the line. However, confidence in this scenario is low. Depending on forecast trends, outlook upgrades could become necessary in subsequent outlooks. ..Leitman.. 03/10/2026Read more

Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1238 AM CDT Tue Mar 10 2026 Valid 101200Z - 111200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHERN MISSOURI...ACROSS NORTHERN ILLINOIS INTO NORTHWEST INDIANA. AN ENHANCED RISK IS ALSO FORECAST ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE TEXAS PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are forecast on Tuesday from the southern Plains into the southern Great Lakes vicinity. All severe hazards are possible, including the risk for a few strong tornadoes and very large hail. ...Southern Great Lakes... Strong northern stream will gradually sag south across the northern Rockies as a short-wave trough ejects across MT/WY. This feature is forecast to advance into the eastern portion of the northern Plains by 11/12z as a 90+kt 500mb speed max translates across northwest IA into southern MN. Late timing of this feature is not particularly conducive for assisting daytime convection downstream across northern IL/IN region, as height falls will lag until the latter half of the period. Even so, latest model guidance suggests a weak surface low will evolve along the front and track across northern MO into northwest IL by early evening, then toward southern Lake MI by midnight. Boundary-layer heating should prove instrumental in destabilization ahead of the surface low and forecast soundings suggest convective temperatures may be breached after 21z from northern MO into northern IL. Strong deep-layer shear favors supercell development and this activity will spread east, along/south of a warm front that should extend across northern IL into southern MI. Temperature gradient across this boundary will be sharp so any supercells that spread north of the wind shift will quickly become elevated and pose mainly a hail risk. Environmental conditions south of the front should be characterized by MLCAPE in excess of 2500 J/kg with strong 0-3km SRH. Tornadoes and large hail are certainly possible with warm-sector supercells. Parameters favor the potential for strong tornadoes. This activity will spread east during the overnight hours, possibly as far east as portions of northeast OH, as westerly flow strengthens across this portion of the Great Lakes. ...Southern Plains... Strong upper low is clearly evident on water-vapor imagery over the central Baja Peninsula early this morning. This low is ejecting east-northeast in line with latest model guidance and should advance into north central Mexico by 18z, then into far west TX by early evening as it begins to open up. Strong boundary layer heating will be noted across northeast Mexico, north along the TX/NM border into western KS. As a result, steep 0-3km lapse rates will develop ahead of the approaching trough. Leading edge of large-scale ascent should overspread the dry line around 21z and supercells should quickly evolve as midlevel temperatures will cool quickly immediately ahead of the trough. Very large hail is possible with initial supercell development before strong forcing encourages a more linear evolution and possible elongated MCS. Strong winds may accompany this squall line. Latest model guidance also suggests a weak disturbance may eject well ahead of the primary low into south central TX. Deep convection is possible ahead of this feature, but the primary concern will be some hail and gusts. ..Darrow/Lyons.. 03/10/2026Read more