047  
FXUS64 KLZK 072057  
AFDLZK  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LITTLE ROCK AR  
357 PM CDT MON JUL 7 2025  
   
..NEW KEY MESSAGES, DISCUSSION  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
ISSUED AT 143 PM CDT MON JUL 7 2025  
 
+ FOR THIS WORK WEEK EACH AFTERNOON WILL FEATURE THE POTENTIAL FOR  
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS, PRIMARILY DRIVEN BY THE HEAT OF THE DAY  
EACH DAY. SHOWERS AND STORMS ARE EXPECTED TO HAVE THEIR HIGHEST  
COVERAGE EACH AFTERNOON/EVENING THROUGH MONDAY, WITH LOWER  
COVERAGE EXPECTED LATE THIS WEEK INTO NEXT WEEKEND.  
 
+ TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN QUITE WARM THIS WEEK, BUT THE CHANCE OF  
AFTERNOON SHOWERS AND STORMS EACH DAY WILL PREVENT THE HEAT FROM  
BUILDING UP INTO DANGEROUS TERRITORY. IT'S STILL EARLY JULY IN  
ARKANSAS, IT'LL STILL BE HOT AND HUMID, BUT AT LEVELS THAT ARE  
COMMON IN THE SUMMER INSTEAD OF WELL ABOVE NORMAL.  
 
+ WHILE SEVERE WEATHER AND FLOODING AREN'T EXPECTED TO BE  
WIDESPREAD CONCERNS, THE TYPES OF STORMS WE'LL SEE THIS WEEK WILL  
BE VERY TALL AND VERY SLOW MOVING. VERY TALL STORMS ARE PRONE TO  
COLLAPSE DRAGGING STRONG TO DAMAGING WINDS DOWN TOWARDS THE GROUND  
WITH LITTLE NOTICE (MICROBURSTS) AND SLOW MOVING TALL STORMS ARE  
NOTORIOUS HEAVY RAINFALL PRODUCERS, SO LOCALIZED FLASH FLOODING IS  
ALSO POSSIBLE. WHILE NEITHER THREAT IS EXPECTED TO BECOME COMMON  
OR FREQUENT, WE WILL HAVE TO WATCH FOR THE POTENTIAL FOR BOTH  
THROUGHOUT THE WEEK.  
 
CAVANAUGH  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 143 PM CDT MON JUL 7 2025  
 
EARLY AFTERNOON WATER VAPOR SATELLITE IMAGERY SHOWS A TROPICAL  
UPPER TROPOSPHERIC TROUGH (TUTT) CENTERED OVER THE LOUISIANA GULF  
COAST AND WEAK UPPER LEVEL RIDGING SPLIT ON EITHER SIDE OF THE  
TUTT WITH HIGH PRESSURE TYPE CIRCULATIONS NOTED OFF THE CAROLINA  
COAST AND OVER THE FOUR CORNERS REGION OF THE SOUTHWEST UNITED  
STATES. TO THE NORTH, A WEAK TROUGH WAS NOTED OVER THE CENTRAL  
GREAT PLAINS, MOVING EAST ON TRACK TO MOVE JUST NORTH OF THE  
ARKANSAS/MISSOURI BORDER. ACROSS ARKANSAS, SURFACE OBSERVATIONS  
ACROSS THE STATE SHOWED TEMPERATURES IN THE LOWER TO MID 90S UNDER  
PARTLY CLOUDY SKIES AND FAIRLY HUMID CONDITIONS IN PLACE WITH DEW  
POINT VALUES IN THE LOWER 70S FOR MOST LOCATIONS. REGIONAL RADAR  
AND SATELLITE DATA SHOWED SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS  
ACROSS MOST OF THE STATE WITH HIT AND MISS ACTIVITY MOST PREVALENT  
OVER THE EASTERN TWO THIRDS OF THE STATE.  
 
THROUGH TONIGHT, EXPECT MOST OF THE SCATTERED SHOWERS AND STORMS  
THAT ARE ON RADAR RIGHT NOW TO DISSIPATE AROUND OR SHORTLY AFTER  
SUNSET. THE ONGOING THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY IS PRIMARILY DRIVEN BY  
RISING CURRENTS OF AIR FORCED BY THE PEAK HEATING HOURS OF THE  
DAY, THOSE CURRENTS OF RISING AIR WILL SHUT OFF QUICKLY AFTER  
SUNSET. AFTER SUNSET HOWEVER, OUR HIGH RESOLUTION MODELS ARE  
SUGGESTING THAT AN ADDITIONAL CLUSTER OF SHOWERS AND STORMS WILL  
DEVELOP OVER THE NORTHWESTERN QUARTER OF THE STATE. THIS IS  
PROBABLY DUE TO THE WEAK FORCING FOR ASCENT TIED TO THE SUBTLE  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH OVER THE KANSAS/OKLAHOMA BORDER. THE ENSEMBLE OF  
SHORT RANGE MODEL GUIDANCE PLACES A 40 TO 50 PERCENT CHANCE OF  
THIS SECOND ROUND OF SLIGHTLY MORE ORGANIZED SHOWERS AND STORMS  
THIS EVENING. IF IT PANS OUT, WOULD EXPECT THAT STORMS WILL TEND  
TO BE ON THE TALL AND SLOW MOVING SIDE, POINTING TO LOCALIZED  
FLOODING AS THE PRIMARY POTENTIAL IMPACT.  
 
ON TUESDAY ARKANSAS IS EXPECTED TO REMAIN IN BETWEEN RIDGES TO THE  
WEST AND EAST AND TROUGHS TO THE NORTH AND SOUTH IN A REGION  
REFERRED TO ON TOPOLOGICAL MAPS AS A SADDLE, OR IN METEOROLOGY AS  
A DEFORMATION ZONE. IN THIS ZONE, THE FLOW ALOFT IS VERY WEAK  
FEATURING STEERING WINDS ALOFT RANGING FROM 5-15 MPH. DESPITE THE  
WEAK NATURE OF THE FLOW, THE PROBLEM FOR ARKANSAS IS THAT THE WEAK  
FLOW FROM EVERY DIRECTION SLOWLY CONVERGES ON ARKANSAS. THAT  
CONVERGENCE WILL FAVOR A GREATER NUMBER OF SHOWERS AND STORMS,  
ESPECIALLY DURING AND AFTER THE PEAK HEATING HOURS OF THE DAY.  
INSTEAD OF THE 30-40 PERCENT COVERAGE THAT WE ARE SEEING TODAY  
ACROSS THE STATE, WE COULD BE LOOKING MORE AT 40-50 PERCENT  
COVERAGE ACROSS THE STATE TOMORROW THROUGHOUT THE DAY. WITH THE  
WINDS ALOFT SO VERY WEAK, IT BECOMES ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE TO PINPOINT  
EXACTLY WHERE THE MOST SHOWERS AND STORMS WILL DEVELOP AND  
PERSIST, BUT THE OVERALL IMPACTS ARE EXPECTED TO BE SIMILAR TO  
TODAY'S ACTIVITY... JUST MORE OF IT.  
 
FOR TOMORROWS' SHOWERS AND STORMS THERE WILL BE PLENTY OF  
MOISTURE, A SUFFICIENT AMOUNT OF HEAT, AND PERSISTENT ALBEIT VERY  
WEAK LIFT WITH ALMOST NO WIND SHEAR TO WORK WITH. COLLAPSING  
STORMS PRODUCING MICROBURSTS AND SLOW MOVING STORMS THAT DON'T  
COLLAPSE, BUT RATHER CONTINUE TO PRODUCE HEAVY RAINFALL AS THEY  
MOSEY ABOUT WILL BE LOCALIZED FLASH FLOOD THREATS. IN MOST CASES A  
QUICK 1 TO 2 INCHES OF RAIN WILL FALL FOR THOSE AREAS THAT GET  
DIRECTLY UNDER A STORM WITH THE POTENTIAL FOR NO RAIN AT ALL IN  
OTHER AREAS. RIGHT NOW HIGH RESOLUTION ENSEMBLE GUIDANCE SUGGESTS  
THAT THE REASONABLE WORST CASE SCENARIO (THE TOP 10 PERCENT OF ALL  
RAINFALL FORECASTS FROM HUNDREDS OF MODELS) IS 3-4 INCHES WHERE  
STORMS PERSIST INSTEAD OF COLLAPSE AS THEY MOVE SLOWLY ACROSS THE  
STATE. WHATEVER RAIN FALLS TOMORROW WILL COME DOWN EFFICIENTLY AND  
QUICKLY AS THE MOISTURE CONTENT OF THE AIR IS FULLY TROPICAL,  
CAPABLE OF DUMPING 2-3 INCH PER HOUR RAINFALL RATES. WHILE FLASH  
FLOODING IS NOT EXPECTED TO BECOME A WIDESPREAD ENOUGH THREAT TO  
WARRANT A FLOOD WATCH, WE WILL HAVE TO WATCH RADAR AND SATELLITE  
TRENDS CLOSELY TO MAKE SURE WE GET AHEAD OF ANY LOCALIZED FLASH  
FLOODING EVENT.  
 
ON WEDNESDAY THE UPPER TROUGH IS EXPECTED TO NUDGE A LITTLE BIT  
FARTHER SOUTH OVER ARKANSAS. OVERALL THIS KEEPS THE WARM AND HUMID  
AIR IN PLACE OVER MUCH OF THE STATE, SO WEDNESDAY WILL BE FAIRLY  
SIMILAR TO TUESDAY'S WEATHER, BUT EVERYTHING WILL BE SHIFTED A BIT  
SOUTH. BECAUSE ARKANSAS IS MORE OR LESS IN THE MIDDLE OF  
EVERYTHING ON TUESDAY, NUDGING FARTHER SOUTH ACTUALLY BRINGS A BIT  
OF DRY AIR ALOFT (IMPORTANT DISTINCTION, BECAUSE THE GROUND WILL  
REMAIN WARM AND HUMID) OVER THE NORTHWESTERN THIRD OR SO OF THE  
STATE. WHILE THE REMAINDER OF THE STATE WON'T NOTICE MUCH OF A  
DIFFERENCE, THIS SHOULD LEAD TO SLIGHTLY LESS RAIN AND STORM  
CHANCES UP IN NORTHWEST ARKANSAS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY...THE AFOREMENTIONED EXTREMELY SLOW MOVING  
UPPER TROUGH IS EXPECTED TO NUDGE EVEN FARTHER SOUTH OVER ARKANSAS  
LATE THIS WEEK USHERING SOME MORE DRY AIR ALOFT IN OVER THE STATE.  
ONCE AGAIN, THIS WON'T NECESSARILY CHANGE ANYTHING WEATHER WISE  
FOR WHAT WE FEEL ON THE GROUND. IT WILL LARGELY REMAIN JUST ABOUT  
AS WARM AND HUMID AS MONDAY - WEDNESDAY, BUT WE WILL SEE A NOTABLE  
DROP OFF IN COVERAGE OF STORMS EACH AFTERNOON. AFTERNOON SHOWERS  
AND STORMS WILL STILL BE POSSIBLE, BUT THEIR COVERAGE WILL BE  
ISOLATED AT BEST AS WE CLOSE OUT THE WORK WEEK.  
 
AS WE MOVE INTO THE WEEKEND THE WEAK TROUGH IS EXPECTED TO HAVE  
EITHER DISSIPATED OR MOVED EAST OF ARKANSAS, TAKING AWAY THE LARGE  
SCALE TENDENCY TO SLOWLY CONVERGE EVERYTHING OVER THE STATE. THIS  
WILL RESULT IN LESS CLOUDS AND LOWER RAIN CHANCES DURING THE PEAK  
HEATING HOURS OF THE DAY WHICH WILL JUST TRANSLATE TO SLIGHTLY  
WARMER TEMPERATURES. WE'LL HAVE TO WATCH CLOSELY TO SEE IF THE  
COMBINATION OF CONTINUED LOW-LEVEL HUMIDITY AND THE INCREASE IN  
HEAT IS ENOUGH TO WARRANT A HEAT ADVISORY, BUT FOR NOW IT LOOKS  
LIKE AFTERNOON HEAT INDEX VALUES WILL REMAIN JUST BELOW 105  
DEGREES. THIS MAY CHANGE AS WE GET BETTER MODEL DATA AS THE  
WEEKEND APPROACHES.  
 
NO SIGNIFICANT CHANGE IN WEATHER CONDITIONS IS EXPECTED IN THE  
LONGER RANGE FORECAST AS WE START TALKING ABOUT NEXT WORK WEEK.  
 
CAVANAUGH  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
BATESVILLE AR 72 90 72 89 / 30 60 30 60  
CAMDEN AR 73 93 73 91 / 10 60 20 70  
HARRISON AR 70 86 70 87 / 40 60 30 40  
HOT SPRINGS AR 73 92 72 91 / 20 70 30 60  
LITTLE ROCK AR 75 92 75 91 / 30 70 30 60  
MONTICELLO AR 75 93 74 91 / 20 60 20 70  
MOUNT IDA AR 72 89 72 90 / 30 70 30 60  
MOUNTAIN HOME AR 70 86 70 87 / 30 70 30 50  
NEWPORT AR 73 92 73 91 / 30 50 30 60  
PINE BLUFF AR 74 92 73 90 / 20 60 20 60  
RUSSELLVILLE AR 73 89 72 90 / 40 70 30 50  
SEARCY AR 72 91 72 90 / 30 60 30 60  
STUTTGART AR 75 92 74 89 / 30 50 30 60  
 
 
   
LZK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...66  
LONG TERM....66  
AVIATION...66  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab AR Page
Main Text Page