
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0354 AM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026 Valid 111200Z - 161200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Saturday/Day 4 to Monday/Day 6... On Saturday, mid-level southwesterly flow will strengthen over the central U.S., as an upper-level system moves to near the West Coast. A moist airmass will be in place over the southern and central Plains, as a low-amplitude shortwave trough moves across the region. Large-scale ascent along with warming surface temperatures will result in scattered thunderstorm development over much of west Texas Saturday afternoon. MLCAPE is expected to peak near 1000 J/kg in some areas, with 0-6 km shear being in the 30 to 40 knot range over much of the southern High Plains. This should be sufficient for a severe threat, with large hail and severe wind gusts possible. From Saturday night into Sunday, strong moisture advection is forecast over the Great Plains. By Sunday afternoon, moderate instability is expected to be in place over much of this airmass. Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are expected throughout much of the moist sector during the afternoon and evening. Some model forecasts move a 50 to 60 knot mid-level jet through central and northeast Texas during the afternoon and evening. If this happens, then a substantial severe threat would be possible from parts of central and north Texas into Oklahoma. Severe storms, including supercells with large hail, wind damage and a tornado threat would be possible in areas that destabilize the most. On Monday, a moist and unstable airmass is forecast to remain from the southern Plains extending north-northeastward into the Upper Midwest. Strong to severe thunderstorm development will be possible over much of the instability corridor in the afternoon and evening. The greatest potential for severe storms is forecast from the southern Plains north-northeastward into the lower Missouri Valley and upper Mississippi Valley, where the models develop moderate instability and have 0-6 km shear mostly in the 30 to 40 knot range. Severe storms with large hail, wind damage and a tornado threat will be possible. ...Tuesday/Day 7 and Wednesday/Day 8... The western U.S. trough is finally forecast to approach the southern Plains on Tuesday, where a moist and unstable airmass should be in place. Some solutions suggest that a mid-level jet will move into the southern Plains Tuesday afternoon. This would create strong deep-layer shear over parts of the moist sector, suggesting that a substantial severe threat will be possible. Although there is still spatial uncertainty regarding this scenario, current model forecasts would support supercells with large hail, severe wind gusts and some tornadoes. On Wednesday, a shortwave trough is forecast to move through the central states, with a southwest-to-northeast corridor of moderate instability in place by afternoon from northeast Texas into western Ozarks. This would be favorable for severe storms. However, at this extended range, considerable uncertainty exists concerning severe threat magnitude and spacing.Read more

Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0217 AM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026 Valid 091200Z - 101200Z ...Synopsis... Largely zonal flow will be in place across much of the Rockies on D2/Thursday as a closed upper-level trough approaches the California coastline and a series of shortwave troughs rotates through the northern Great Lakes region. At the surface, weak low pressure center is forecast to develop across southeastern Colorado, with a trailing dryline extending southward across the central High Plains and a cold front extending northeastward across the central Great Plains. ...Portions of the southern High Plains... Relative humidity values are forecast to fall to 10-20% across portions of the southern High Plains Thursday afternoon amid peak mixing. Latest high-res guidance also suggests that a tightened surface pressure gradient will favor sustained south-southwesterly winds around 15 mph across this region. With dry, receptive fuels in place across the region, this combination of winds/RH is expected to promote a few hours of elevated fire weather conditions across portions of northeastern New Mexico, extreme southeastern Colorado, the western Oklahoma Panhandle, and the northwestern Texas Panhandle. Increased mid-level moisture atop deep, dry boundary layers (forecast soundings suggest boundary layers may extend up to ~500 mb or 3-4 km AGL), may also support the development of isolated, high-based convection across the region. With PWATs on the order of half an inch or less, little precipitation is expected, but outflow/wind gusts from this convection may locally augment surface winds speeds. With forecast soundings indicating the presence of 50-100 J/kg MUCAPE atop the boundary layer, an occasional dry lightning strike may also be possible across this area. Confidence in the coverage of potential dry thunderstorms remains low at this time, but trends will be monitored for future outlook issuances. ...Portions of the Great Basin/Southwest... Southwesterly winds of 10-20 mph are expected to overlap low RH of 15-20% across portions of the southern Great Basin and Southwest. These factors may generate locally elevated fire weather concerns Thursday afternoon; however, recent cooler weather, precipitation, and resultant marginal fuels are expected to temper widespread fire weather concerns at this time. ..Chalmers.. 04/08/2026 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more

Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0213 AM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026 Valid 101200Z - 111200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PART OF THE SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE OZARKS... ...SUMMARY... Thunderstorms with isolated severe gusts and hail will be possible on Friday over parts of the southern and central Plains eastward into the Ozarks. ...Southern and Central Plains/Ozarks... An upper-level ridge will move eastward into the Rockies on Friday, as mid-level flow remains westerly over the Great Plains. At the surface, a cold front is forecast to move southward across far southern Kansas. Surface heating and low-level convergence along the front will aid convective initiation during the afternoon. A few small thunderstorm clusters will be possible from late afternoon into the evening. Near the front by late afternoon, model forecasts have MLCAPE peaking in the 1200 to 1500 J/kg range, and show 0-6 km shear in the 25 to 30 knot range. This should be enough for a marginal severe threat. Hail and isolated severe gusts will be the primary threats. ..Broyles.. 04/08/2026Read more

Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0213 AM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026 Valid 081200Z - 091200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHWEST SOUTH CAROLINA INTO EASTERN AND SOUTH-CENTRAL GEORGIA... ...Synopsis... Upper-level ridging will persist across the Southwest today as an upper-level trough progresses eastward across the far northern Great Plains/southern Canada. Meanwhile, a closed upper-level low will simultaneously approach the California coastline. At the surface, a cold front will move east-southeastward across the central Great Plains and Midwest while surface high pressure shifts offshore of the Northeast. ...Portions of the Southeast... Surface high pressure will continue to favor enhanced northeasterly flow across much of the Southeast today. Sustained surface winds of 10-15 mph are expected to coincide with reduced RH of 25-35% and dry, receptive fuels to promote elevated fire weather concerns from north-central North Carolina southwestward into portions of southern Georgia. Latest high-res guidance continues to suggest a corridor of stronger winds (15-20 mph) will overlap minimum RH values as low as ~20% (locally lower) during peak mixing, which will support a period of Critical fire weather conditions from southwestern South Carolina into eastern/south-central Georgia. Locally elevated conditions will also be possible into eastern North Carolina and northeastern South Carolina; however, recent heavier rainfall accumulations across these areas are expected to preclude any widespread concerns. ...Portions of the central/southern High Plains... Locally elevated conditions will be possible across portions of the central/southern High Plains this afternoon, especially where gap flows and terrain effects enhance downslope flow conditions. The greatest potential will be across portions of southern Wyoming, southern South Dakota, and eastern Colorado. The combination of winds, RH, and fuels is expected to largely remain below elevated thresholds, thus widespread fire weather concerns are not anticipated at this time. ..Chalmers.. 04/08/2026 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more