
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 PM CST Sat Dec 27 2025 Valid 291200Z - 041200Z The mid-level ridge across the central United States will finally be suppressed to the south by the start of this forecast period as a strong cyclone evolves across the Great Lakes. This strong cyclone will drive a cold front southward into the Gulf of America and through the Southeast, ushering in a cold, dry continental airmass across much of the eastern US. Despite the cooler airmass, elevated to locally critical fire weather conditions may develop across portions of the Southern Plains on Monday (D3) and Tuesday (D4). On Monday the dry airmass will be fully entrenched across the Plains as a strong surface anticyclone takes hold from the Northern Plains into the Southern Plains. The result will be minimum afternoon relative humidity will be lower than on Sunday, falling into the teens and twenty percent range. Winds, however, will be considerably weaker than on Sunday, with maximum gusts likely in the 10-20 mph range. The result will be elevated to locally critical fire conditions for at least a couple of hours during the afternoon. On Tuesday the center of the surface anticyclone will slide east of the Plains resulting in winds turning to the west and southwest. This will set the stage for a potential dry return flow regime across western Oklahoma. Minimum relative humidity will once again be in the teens in the presence of potentially gusty afternoon winds. This may once again result in elevated to locally critical fire weather concerns. Through the rest of the forecast period, the large-scale pattern across the CONUS will consist of a northwest flow regime owing to a western ridge and eastern trough. The northwest flow pattern will limit appreciable moisture return into the eastern US, such that any embedded disturbance within the larger-scale flow pattern could result in elevated fire weather concerns. However, the subtlety of any of these features is such that the timing of any such feature is below the scale of predictability at these time ranges. ..Marsh.. 12/27/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more

Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0134 PM CST Sat Dec 27 2025 Valid 272000Z - 281200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not forecast through tonight across the contiguous United States. ...20z Update... The previous forecast remains on track with no changes required. Latest high-res guidance continues to show limited thunderstorm potential until around/after 06z tonight across portions of northeast KS into northern MO and western IL. See the previous discussion below for additional details. ..Moore.. 12/27/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1016 AM CST Sat Dec 27 2025/ ...Synopsis and Discussion... A large-scale upper trough with multiple embedded perturbations will move eastward from the western CONUS across much of the Plains through the period. While cold mid-level temperatures will accompany this upper trough, meager low-level moisture and cool surface temperatures should generally limit instability and the potential for lightning with any convective showers that can develop this afternoon across the Great Basin/Rockies. Low-level moisture will gradually return northward through tonight across the lower/mid MS Valley and lower OH Valley ahead of a strong cold front and deepening surface low over the central Plains and mid MO Valley. Increasing warm/moist advection associated with a low-level jet should eventually support weak MUCAPE and isolated thunderstorm potential across parts of eastern KS into MO and central IL late tonight/early Sunday morning. With MUCAPE forecast to remain generally less than 750 J/kg, the potential for severe hail with elevated convection appears low even though deep-layer shear will be strong.Read more

Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0119 PM CST Sat Dec 27 2025 Valid 291200Z - 301200Z ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... The risk for thunderstorms appears negligible across the U.S. Monday through Monday night. ...Discussion... Models indicate that large-scale mid-level ridging will be maintained across British Columbia and the Pacific Northwest into portions of the Canadian Prairies and U.S. Great Plains Monday through Monday night, but with little further amplification. At the same time, some further amplification of large-scale downstream troughing may continue, as a surface cold intrusion noses through the northwestern Gulf Basin. However, the primary embedded short wave perturbation and associated lower/mid-tropospheric cyclone are generally forecast to progress northeast and east of the lower Great Lakes region, toward the Canadian Maritimes. In the wake of a secondary developing surface low, across parts of northern New England into the lower St. Lawrence Valley, the leading edge of the cold air is forecast to rapidly spread east/southeast of the Appalachians and well offshore of much of the Atlantic Seaboard by late Monday night. Along this frontal zone, models do indicate the lingering presence of weak, elevated instability across parts of Deep South Texas, the northeastern Gulf coast vicinity, and the northern Mid Atlantic into New England early through midday Monday. However, the extent to which forcing for ascent remains supportive of convection capable of producing lightning remains unclear, and thunderstorm probabilities will be maintained at less than 10 percent. ..Kerr.. 12/27/2025Read more