
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0249 PM CST Sat Nov 22 2025 Valid 241200Z - 301200Z ...Days 3-6/Monday-Thursday... A mid-level wave and attendant surface trough/frontal features will support showers and thunderstorms across the southern/central Plains on Day 3/Monday, with precipitation expanding and moving into the lower MS River Valley and OH River Valley by Day 4/Tuesday. A strong cold front extending southwestward from a deepening surface low in the Upper Midwest should sweep across much of the eastern U.S. midweek, reaching the Atlantic Coast late Day 5/Wednesday period. A dry, post-frontal flow regime could overlap with pockets of dry fuels across southern GA, northern FL and the Carolinas on Day 6/Thursday, but some preceding rainfall associated with the frontal passage should mitigate a more significant fire weather threat across the Southeast. The lower confidence in spatial distribution of expected rainfall and marginal fuel environment precludes introduction of critical probabilities at this time. ...Days 6-8/Friday-Saturday... A descending upper-level trough into the western U.S. and subsequent lee cyclogenesis across the central/southern Plains could provide a supportive environment for elevated winds and dry conditions across the southern High Plains closer to Day 8/Saturday. However, uncertainty in state of fuels from preceding rainfall through the Day 2-3/Sunday-Monday period reduces predictability of critical fire weather conditions late next week. ..Williams.. 11/22/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more

Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0146 PM CST Sat Nov 22 2025 Valid 222000Z - 231200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Scattered thunderstorms are possible across much of the Southwest, mainly from late in the day into the overnight. Isolated thunderstorms are also possible from the Texas Coast across the Southeast States. Severe thunderstorm potential appears low. ...20Z Update... The previous forecast thinking remains the same, and no changes were warranted with this update. See the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 11/22/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1030 AM CST Sat Nov 22 2025/ ...South TX/TX Coast across the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic... Recent surface analysis places a low just off the northern Mid-Atlantic coast. A cold front extends west-southwestward from this low across central VA and middle TN to another low just east of MEM. A cold front extends southwestward from this secondary low across northern MS, central LA, and the TX Coastal Plain. This cold front is forecast to push eastward/southeastward throughout the day, and isolated thunderstorms are anticipated within this broad warm sector that stretches from the TX coast through much of the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. Poor lapse rates and corresponding limited buoyancy should keep updrafts weak and transient throughout much of this region, limiting the severe potential. The only exception is across south TX, where considerable low-level moisture (i.e. dewpoints in the 70s) is in place, resulting in greater buoyancy this afternoon. Even so, this region will be displaced well south and west of the stronger mid-level flow, with weak shear likely limiting updraft organization and persistence and tempering the overall severe potential. ...Southwest... Recent satellite imagery shows a well-defined upper low just off the northern Baja California coast this morning. This low is forecast to progress gradually eastward today, with strong mid-level flow spreading from the base of this low eastward/northeastward across the Southwest. Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are anticipated ahead of this upper low, spreading from AZ this afternoon and evening into NM overnight. In general, limited buoyancy should keep overall thunderstorm strength low, despite strengthen deep-layer vertical shear. The only exception is across southeast AZ, where very strong vertical shear could overlap modest buoyancy for a few hours this evening. Meridional orientation to the shear will favor line segments and storm interactions, which should limit updraft organization and the overall severe potential. That being said, a few stronger storms with small, sub-severe hail and gusty winds are possible. The overall severe potential is currently forecast to remain too isolated to include any 5% probabilities.Read more

Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0131 PM CST Sat Nov 22 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... No changes needed to the Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook with minimal to no overlap of dry/breezy conditions and receptive fuels supportive of rapid fire spread expected across the contiguous U.S. Please see previous discussion. ..Williams.. 11/22/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1258 AM CST Sat Nov 22 2025/ ...Synopsis... There are no fire-weather concerns anticipated for Sunday. A progressive trough will bring precipitation from the southern Rockies into the southern Great Plains, while the rest of the Continental U.S. will experience cooler temperatures and weak surface winds, limiting the potential for wildfire ignition and spread. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more

Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0112 PM CST Sat Nov 22 2025 Valid 241200Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN EAST TX TO FAR SOUTHERN AR... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from later Monday afternoon into Monday night across east Texas towards the Ark-La-Miss. A few tornadoes along with large hail and damaging winds are anticipated. ...Synopsis... A shortwave trough over the central to southern High Plains will move east, dampening Monday night in response to an upstream wave digging from the Pacific Northwest to the northern Great Plains. While the leading surface low will remain weak, pronounced upper-level diffluence and persistent low-level warm theta-e advection will support extensive convection across the South-Central States through the period. ...Central TX to the Ark-La-Miss... A swath of elevated convection should be ongoing at 12Z Monday from central TX northeastward, likely north of a gradually advancing surface warm front. This boundary should accelerate north-northeast with diurnal heating, yielding expansion of surface-based instability across much of east TX by afternoon. While low-probability severe hail is possible early, primary severe potential should await peak heating along/ahead of the trailing early-day convective swath. Elongated hodographs, amid 500-mb southwesterlies in excess of 50 kts, will favor regenerative supercells. These should be semi-discrete with southwest extent and embedded within an increasingly messy cluster mode northeastward. Large hail and some tornado threat should tend to be favored across east TX during the late afternoon and evening, before low-level winds subside and become more veered Monday night from west to east. Nocturnal tornado and some damaging wind potential may persist across the Sabine Valley towards the Ark-La-Miss, where enlarged low-level hodographs coincide with the northeast flank of the surface-based instability plume. ..Grams.. 11/22/2025Read more