
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0140 AM CST Tue Jan 06 2026 Valid 061200Z - 071200Z ...Synopsis... Weak surface lee troughing beneath zonal flow aloft will support relatively quiescent fire weather conditions for most of the central CONUS today. The one exception will be over portions of the central High Plains, where locally stronger downslope flow is expected as a small mid-level impulse overspreads the region during the afternoon. 15-20 mph sustained westerly surface winds amid 20-25 percent RH will overlap with drying fuels for several hours, warranting the continuance of Elevated highlights. ..Squitieri.. 01/06/2026 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more

Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1256 AM CST Tue Jan 06 2026 Valid 071200Z - 081200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF WEST AND NORTH TX INTO OK... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible Wednesday night from west-central Texas into parts of Oklahoma. ...Southern Plains... A mid/upper-level shortwave trough initially near Baja California is forecast to eject east-northeastward and take on a negative tilt as it approaches the Southern Plains Wednesday night. Previously slower guidance (such as the EC-AIFS and GFS) has trended toward a somewhat faster solution with this system. A surface low is forecast to deepen over the south-central High Plains during the evening. Low-level moisture will spread northward, with 60s F dewpoints potentially reaching the Red River region prior to the end of the period. As ascent attendant to the shortwave trough impinges upon the increasing low-level moisture, thunderstorm development is expected Wednesday night across parts of west/north TX into OK, which may spread toward the Ozark Plateau prior to 12Z Thursday. Initial MUCAPE of near/above 500 J/kg and increasing deep-layer shear could support some storm organization. There may be a brief window for near-surface-based development near/after 03Z across parts of west-central TX, but the bulk of convection will likely be somewhat elevated. The buoyancy profile will be hampered by poor mid/upper-level lapse rates, and lingering near-surface stability will likely persist across most of the warm sector, resulting in uncertainty regarding severe potential with any organized cells/clusters. However, given the expectation for strongly forced convection Wednesday night within a favorably sheared environment, a Marginal Risk has been introduced. Isolated strong/damaging gusts will be possible, and hail cannot be ruled out with initial development, before buoyancy becomes increasingly depleted with time. Given the strength of low-level shear/SRH, the potential for near-surface-based development will continue to be monitored regarding any tornado threat. ...Pacific Northwest coast... Low-topped convection with sporadic lightning flashes will be possible through at least the morning and afternoon near the Pacific Northwest coast, as a mid/upper-level shortwave trough moves across the region. Cold temperatures aloft (less than -30C at 500 mb) will support meager buoyancy (with MUCAPE generally 100-200 J/kg), primarily near and in the wake of a cold front. Relatively strong low-level flow could support gusty winds with this convection, though the very weak buoyancy is expected to limit organized severe potential. ..Dean.. 01/06/2026Read more

Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1100 PM CST Mon Jan 05 2026 Valid 061200Z - 071200Z ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Thunderstorm probabilities across the U.S. appear less than 10 percent today through tonight. ...Discussion... Thermodynamic profiles across the U.S. remain generally stable, or at least not appreciably conducive to convective development capable of producing lightning, and models indicate little potential for change today through tonight. Limited ongoing moisture return, off a still slowly modifying Gulf boundary-layer, appears likely to become cut off, as low-level flow takes on an increasing westerly component to the south and southwest of a modest cyclone forecast to migrate across the southern Great Lakes region. Increasing large-scale ascent, associated with secondary cyclogenesis near/offshore of the northern Mid Atlantic through southern New England coast by late tonight, may be accompanied by a substantive increase in thunderstorm development, but mostly ahead of the trailing cold front, near/east of the Gulf Stream. Upstream, models indicate that mid/upper flow will undergo amplification across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America. It appears that this may include at least one vigorous short wave impulse digging toward the Pacific Northwest, accompanied by a potentially notable convective band with embedded thunderstorm activity, but probably not quite reaching the coastal waters prior to 12Z Wednesday. Farther south, within larger-scale troughing digging across the southern mid- to subtropical latitude eastern Pacific, a relatively compact cyclonic mid-level circulation may evolve, with an associated cold core that could support a developing area of thunderstorm activity. However, before undergoing an east-northeastward acceleration toward northern Baja and the Southwestern international border vicinity, it appears that this will remain offshore through 12Z Wednesday. ..Kerr.. 01/06/2026Read more