256  
FXUS63 KSGF 161710  
AFDSGF  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SPRINGFIELD MO  
1210 PM CDT FRI MAY 16 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- THERE IS A MODERATE LEVEL (4 OF 5) RISK FOR SEVERE WEATHER  
TODAY, MAINLY ALONG AND EAST OF HIGHWAY 65 AND BEFORE SUNSET.  
VERY LARGE HAIL TO THE SIZE OF SOFTBALLS, DAMAGING WINDS UP  
TO 80 MPH, AND TORNADOES WILL BE POSSIBLE.  
 
- 40-60% CHANCE FOR SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS SATURDAY NIGHT  
INTO SUNDAY MORNING. A MARGINAL LEVEL (1 OF 5) RISK EXISTS FOR  
A FEW THUNDERSTORMS MAY BECOME CAPABLE OF PRODUCING WIND  
GUSTS UP TO 60 MPH AND HAIL UP TO THE SIZE OF QUARTERS.  
 
- THE UNSETTLED WEATHER PATTERN WILL CONTINUE ACROSS THE AREA EARLY  
NEXT WEEK. THIS INCLUDES THE POTENTIAL FOR STRONG TO SEVERE  
THUNDERSTORMS IN ADDITION TO LOCALIZED HEAVY RAINFALL AND  
FLOODING. UNCERTAINTY REMAINS IN THE EXACT DETAILS.  
 
 
   
MESOSCALE  
 
ISSUED AT 955 AM CDT FRI MAY 16 2025  
 
SGF MORNING RAOB SHOWED VERY DRY AIR WITH A STRONG CAP IN PLACE.  
HOWEVER, A WARM FRONT HAS QUICKLY LIFTED INTO THE AREA WITH  
SIGNIFICANT AIRMASS MODIFICATION UNDERWAY. WE PLAN TO GET  
ANOTHER BALLOON IN THE AROUND AROUND 16Z TO GET A BETTER FEEL OF  
AIRMASS CHANGES PRIOR TO CONVECTION MOVING OVERHEAD.  
 
NOTHING ON RADAR AS OF 10AM, BUT SEEING AGITATED CUMULUS OVER NE  
OK AND INTO FAR SW MO, WHICH MAKES SENSE GIVEN INCREASING  
INSTABILITY, DECREASING CIN AND INCREASING LOW LEVEL  
CONVERGENCE. THINKING CONVECTION IS LIKELY TO INITIATE WITHIN  
THE NEXT HOUR OR SO SOMEWHERE SOUTH OF JOPLIN AND WEST OF  
BRANSON. EVOLUTION AFTER INITIATION IS STILL UNCERTAIN, BUT  
BETTER MOISTURE AND INSTABILITY WILL FAVOR GREATEST COVERAGE AND  
SEVERITY ALONG AND SOUTH OF I-44 THROUGH EARLY TO MID-AFTERNOON.  
WITH FAIRLY STRAIGHT HODOGRAPHS, LOOK FOR SPLITTING SUPERCELLS  
WHERE RIGHT MOVERS HEAD STRAIGHT EAST AND LEFT MOVERS HEAD TO  
THE NE WITH AROUND A 45 DEGREE SEPARATION IN THOSE VECTORS.  
 
SPC MESOANALYSIS SEEMS TO HAVE A DECENT HANDLE ON CURRENT  
CONDITIONS IN SHOWING A NOSE OF 2,000-3,000 J/KG MLCAPE JUST  
EAST OF THE MO/OK AND MO/KS BORDERS WITH A SMALL AREA OF REDUCED  
MLCIN < 25 J/KG NEAR NEOSHO TO SOUTHWEST CITY. BY 17Z, RAP  
CONTINUES TO ERODE THE CAP AND SHIFTS THE NOSE OF 2,000-3,000  
J/KG OF MLCAPE EAST ALONG HIGHWAY 65. BY 19Z, RAP SHOWS  
2,500-3,500 J/KG OF MLCAPE IN AREAS EAST OF HIGHWAY 65.  
THROUGHOUT THIS TIME FRAME, DEEP LAYER SHEAR WILL BE 60-70 KTS.  
 
HAIL THREAT: ALL PARAMETERS ARE SUPPORTIVE OF VERY LARGE HAIL UP  
TO AROUND 4 INCHES, OR SOFTBALL SIZE. LOOK FOR PROLIFIC HAIL  
PRODUCTION POSSIBLE IN LEFT MOVERS.  
 
WIND THREAT: WITH STRONG WIND FIELDS AND A LOADED UP  
ATMOSPHERE, GUSTS UP TO 80 MPH ARE POSSIBLE.  
 
TORNADO: MOST PARAMETERS ARE SUPPORTIVE OF A TORNADO THREAT.  
SURFACE WINDS ARE FROM THE SOUTHWEST, WHICH ISN'T AS FAVORABLE,  
BUT GIVEN OTHER POSITIVE FACTORS A THREAT DOES EXIST.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 345 AM CDT FRI MAY 16 2025  
 
CURRENT WATER VAPOR IMAGERY DEPICTS A VERY POTENT UPPER-LEVEL  
LOW SITTING OVER THE NORTHERN PLAINS STATES, WITH A SOLID  
100-110 KT JET CORE STRETCHED FROM THE FOUR CORNERS REGION,  
ACROSS THE CENTRAL PLAINS, AND INTO THE GREAT LAKES REGION. A  
SHORTWAVE IS NOTED WITHIN THIS FLOW ACROSS THE OK/TX PANHANDLES.  
ASSOCIATED WITH THIS FEATURE, A SURFACE LOW IS DEVELOPING AND  
WILL BE OUR MAIN WEATHER-MAKER FOR TODAY. MEANWHILE, SURFACE OBS  
DEPICT A COLD FRONT SLOWLY CLEARING ACROSS SOUTHEAST MISSOURI.  
MID-60S DEWPOINTS AHEAD OF THE FRONT IN OREGON/SHANNON COUNTIES  
IS ALLOWING FOR 500-1000 J/KG OF MUCAPE. RADAR IMAGERY AND IR  
SATELLITE SHOW DEVELOPING SHOWERS ALONG THIS FRONTAL BOUNDARY.  
WITH 60-70 KTS OF EFFECTIVE BULK SHEAR WITHIN THIS REGION, A  
STRONG THUNDERSTORM OR TWO COULD BRUSH PORTIONS OF OREGON COUNTY  
GOING THROUGH THIS MORNING. OTHERWISE, TEMPERATURES ACROSS OUR  
AREA ARE DROPPING TO THE MIDDLE 50S BEHIND THE COLD FRONT.  
 
MODERATE (4 OF 5) RISK FOR SEVERE WEATHER TODAY:  
 
THE AFOREMENTIONED SHORTWAVE AND ASSOCIATED SURFACE LOW OVER THE  
PANHANDLES WILL TRANSLATE INTO OUR WESTERN CWA THIS MORNING.  
ASSOCIATED MASS RESPONSE WILL INCREASE WIND SPEEDS TO 15-20 MPH  
WITH GUSTS UP TO 30 MPH AT TIMES. THIS WILL QUICKLY ADVECT  
MIDDLE TO UPPER 60 DEWPOINTS AND MIDDLE 80S TEMPERATURES UP  
INTO OUR REGION. THIS, ALONG WITH COOLER TEMPERATURES ALOFT,  
WILL GREATLY DESTABILIZE THE ATMOSPHERE WITH THE HREF MEAN AT  
3000-4000 J/KG OF MLCAPE BENEATH 60-70 KTS OF DEEP LAYER SHEAR--  
A VOLATILE ENVIRONMENT FOR SURE. AS THE COLD FRONT PLOWS THROUGH  
THIS AIR MASS, SCATTERED SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED TO  
DEVELOP. BELOW ARE SOME WHEN, WHERE, WHAT, AND UNCERTAINTY  
DETAILS.  
 
TIMING: TWO MAIN TIMEFRAMES ARE NOTED. FIRST, BETWEEN 10 AM AND  
3 PM ALONG THE COLD FRONT JUST AS UNSTABLE AIR GETS ADVECTED IN  
FRONT. IF STORMS DEVELOP DURING THIS TIME PERIOD, THEY WOULD  
PROGRESS WEST TO EAST QUICKLY, OUTPACING THE FRONT. THEN, A  
SECOND WINDOW OF REDEVELOPMENT ALONG THE FRONT IS POSSIBLE  
BETWEEN 3-6 PM.  
 
LOCATION: THE FIRST TIMEFRAME (10 AM - 3 PM) OF DEVELOPMENT  
APPEARS TO BE SOMEWHERE BETWEEN THE I-49 AND HIGHWAY 65  
CORRIDORS WHEN CAMS FIRST START DISSOLVING THE CAP AHEAD OF THE  
COLD FRONT. THESE STORMS WOULD MOVE WEST TO EAST THROUGH MIDDAY  
AND CLEAR THE EASTERN OZARKS AFTER 3 PM. THE SECOND TIMEFRAME  
(3-6 PM) WOULD AGAIN BE ALONG THE FRONT DURING PEAK HEATING.  
DURING THIS TIMEFRAME, THE FRONT SHOULD BE ACROSS THE EASTERN  
OZARKS. ALL STORMS SHOULD BE OUT OF THE AREA BY 7 PM.  
 
HAZARDS: THE MAIN HAZARD IS VERY LARGE HAIL UP TO THE SIZE OF  
SOFTBALLS. SECONDARY HAZARDS ARE VERY STRONG WIND GUSTS UP TO 80  
MPH, AND A FEW TORNADOES. CAM SOUNDINGS FULLY SUPPORT VERY LARGE  
HAIL. IN ADDITION TO THE VERY STRONG INSTABILITY AND SHEAR,  
SOUNDINGS DEPICT 7-8 C/KM MID-LEVEL LAPSE RATES, >40000 FT ELS  
AND STRONG VENTILATION AT THAT LEVEL, AND MODEST STORM RELATIVE  
INFLOW AND SUB-HAIL GROWTH ZONE CAPE. THIS ALL LEADS TO A LARGE  
HAIL PARAMETER OF 20-30 WHICH BASED ON RESEARCH SUPPORTS HAIL  
GREATER THAN 3.5 INCHES. INDEED, SPC'S EXPERIMENTAL OUTLOOK  
PLACES THE EASTERN OZARKS IN A "DOUBLE HATCHING" WHICH SIGNIFIES  
HIGHER CONFIDENCE IN THE OCCURRENCE OF VERY LARGE HAIL. THE  
STRONG INSTABILITY AND KINEMATICS WILL ALSO SUPPORT STRONG RFDS  
AND/OR BOWING SEGMENTS WITH WIND GUSTS UP TO 80 MPH. THERE IS A  
TORNADO THREAT AS LOW- LEVEL SHEAR APPROACHES 20-25 KTS WITH LCL  
HEIGHTS BELOW 500M. HOWEVER, AS THE DAY GOES ON, HODOGRAPHS  
BECOME MORE STRAIGHT WITH SOUTHWESTERLY SURFACE WINDS AND 0-1 KM  
SRH VALUES OF 100-150 M2/S2. THIS IS CERTAINLY SUFFICIENT FOR  
TORNADOES, BUT THE THREAT IS A BIT LOWER THAN HAIL.  
 
UNCERTAINTY: HI-RES GUIDANCE HAS BEEN A TAD BEARISH IN THE  
COVERAGE OF STORMS, WITH SOME RUNS OF THE HRRR KEEPING MOST OF  
OUR AREA DRY FOR THE ENTIRE PERIOD. THIS SEEMS A TAD ODD GIVEN  
THE MODELED UNCAPPED ENVIRONMENT, DECENT FORCING FROM  
CONVERGENCE ALONG THE COLD FRONT, AND NO REAL INDICATION OF  
SUBSIDENCE ALOFT. THEREFORE, EXPECTATIONS IS FOR AT LEAST  
SCATTERED STORM DEVELOPMENT DURING THE TIME PERIODS MENTIONED  
ABOVE. INDEED, OTHER HREF MEMBERS DO HAVE STORM DEVELOPMENT,  
ESPECIALLY ACROSS THE EASTERN OZARKS IN THE AFTERNOON. THE MOST  
BULLISH MEMBER IS THE NAM WITH STORMS DEVELOPING ALONG I-49.  
THOUGH FORECAST SOUNDINGS FROM THIS MEMBER DEPICT A STOUT CAP  
THAT OTHERS DO NOT DEPICT. THEREFORE, THERE'S STILL SOME  
UNCERTAINTY IN EXACT EXTENT OF COVERAGE, BUT EXPECTATION IS  
STILL FOR SCATTERED STORMS. AND WHEN STORMS GO, IT WILL NOT TAKE  
MUCH FOR THEM TO BECOME SEVERE, PERHAPS SIGNIFICANTLY SEVERE.  
 
NEGATIVE VORTICITY ADVECTION BEHIND THE CLEARING SHORTWAVE AND  
SINKING AIR WITHIN THE COOLER AIR MASS WILL KEEP US DRY TONIGHT  
INTO SATURDAY. LOWS TONIGHT WILL BE IN THE LOWER TO MIDDLE 50S.  
HIGHS SATURDAY WILL BE IN THE MIDDLE TO UPPER 70S (AROUND 80  
NEAR THE SOUTHERN BORDER).  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 345 AM CDT FRI MAY 16 2025  
 
MARGINAL (1 OF 5) RISK FOR SEVERE WEATHER SATURDAY NIGHT:  
 
ANOTHER SHORTWAVE WILL START TRANSLATING EASTWARD INTO THE TX/OK  
PANHANDLE REGION SATURDAY EVENING. THIS WILL BEGIN LIFTING THE  
TRAILING SURFACE COLD FRONT BACK NORTH AS AN EFFECTIVE WARM  
FRONT, KEEPING LOW TEMPERATURES IN THE UPPER 50S TO LOWER 60S  
SATURDAY NIGHT. THUS, RELATIVELY STRONG 850 MB WARM AIR  
ADVECTION ABOVE THE SURFACE FRONT COULD TRIGGER SOME SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS SATURDAY NIGHT INTO SUNDAY MORNING. RAP FORECAST  
SOUNDINGS DURING THIS TIME PERIOD SHOW 500-1000 J/KG MUCAPE,  
LARGELY WITHIN THE HAIL GROWTH ZONE. EFFECTIVE BULK SHEAR WITHIN  
THIS PROFILE LOOKS TO BE IN THE 35-45 KT RANGE. THUS, SOME  
MARGINALLY STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS WOULD BE POSSIBLE WITH HAIL  
UP TO QUARTER SIZE BEING THE MAIN HAZARD. HOWEVER, INVERTED-V  
SOUNDINGS ABOVE THE DEVELOPING NOCTURNAL INVERSION COULD ALLOW  
FOR WIND GUSTS UP TO 60 MPH AS WELL.  
 
ADDITIONAL CHANCES FOR SEVERE WEATHER AND HEAVY RAIN:  
 
DAILY CHANCES FOR SEVERE WEATHER AND HEAVY RAIN CONTINUE THROUGH  
THE WEEKEND AND EARLY NEXT WEEK AS ENSEMBLES DEPICT THE BROADER  
SYNOPTIC PATTERN TO RETAIN PERSISTENT SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW WITH  
EMBEDDED SHORTWAVES TRAVERSING WITHIN THE JET. WITH THIS  
PATTERN, A RATHER SHARP DRYLINE WILL BE IN PLACE ACROSS CENTRAL  
KS/OK/TX SUNDAY AND MONDAY. THE SURFACE WARM FRONT IS PROGGED TO  
BE PLACED IN A WEST-EAST FASHION ACROSS NORTH KS/MO. THIS WILL  
ALLOW FOR A BROAD MOIST AND VERY UNSTABLE REGION EAST OF THE  
DRYLINE AND SOUTH OF THE WARM FRONT, INCLUDING OUR AREA. THE NBM  
MEAN HAS 2000-4000 J/KG ACROSS OUR AREA. THE GEFS EVEN SUGGESTS  
VALUES UP TO 5000-6000 J/KG. GLOBAL MODEL ENSEMBLES ALSO PLACE  
35-45 KTS OF DEEP LAYER SHEAR OVER THIS AIRMASS. THIS IS  
SPARKING 0.7-0.9 EXTREME FORECAST INDEX VALUES FOR CAPE-SHEAR  
COMBO (WITH SOME SHIFTING OF THE TAIL SUGGESTING THE CHANCE FOR  
A MORE VOLATILE ENVIRONMENT). NSSL, NCAR, AND CSU MACHINE  
LEARNING MODELS ARE ALL PICKING UP ON THIS ENVIRONMENT AND  
PLACING ENHANCED SEVERE PROBABILITIES IN OUR AREA, ESPECIALLY  
WEST OF HIGHWAY 65. FOR EXAMPLE, THE NSSL GEFS MACHINE LEARNING  
MODEL GIVES A 30-45% CHANCE OF AREAS WEST OF HIGHWAY 65 TO SEE  
SOME SORT OF SEVERE WEATHER WATCH SUNDAY AND MONDAY.  
 
EARLY MPAS/RRFS CAM SIGNALS POINT TO STORMS FIRING ALONG THE  
DRYLINE IN KANSAS AND OKLAHOMA DURING THE AFTERNOONS OF SUNDAY  
AND MONDAY. THESE THEN PROGRESS EASTWARD, EVOLVING INTO AN MCS  
OVER TIME, WHICH FITS THE GENERAL EVOLUTION OF MAY SEVERE  
STORMS. THEREFORE, THE MAIN SEVERE RISK FOR US WILL BE SUNDAY  
AND MONDAY NIGHT AND COME FROM THE EVOLUTION OF THESE STORMS AS  
THEY PROGRESS WEST TO EAST. IF AN MCS BECOMES THE MAIN MODE,  
WIND AND TORNADOES WOULD BE THE MAIN HAZARDS. IF CONFLUENCE  
BANDS HAPPEN TO DEVELOP OUT AHEAD OF THE DRYLINE, THERE IS A  
SCENARIO WHERE SUPERCELLS COULD DEVELOP IN OUR CWA, ALLOWING FOR  
ALL HAZARDS TO BE PRESENT.  
 
TUESDAY, MORE OF A LONGWAVE TROUGH IS FORECAST TO KICK THROUGH,  
FINALLY GETTING RID OF THE UNSTABLE AIRMASS. SINCE A COLD FRONT  
WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH THIS SYSTEM MOVING THROUGH, A GREATER  
(OR AT LEAST MORE WIDESPREAD) SEVERE THREAT FOR OUR CWA APPEARS  
POSSIBLE TUESDAY. THERE ARE STILL SOME SUBTLE DIFFERENCES IN  
TIMING AND TROUGH SHAPE BETWEEN THE GLOBAL ENSEMBLES, SO DETAILS  
WILL NEED TO BE WORKED OUT. HOWEVER, STRONG INSTABILITY AND  
KINEMATICS ASSOCIATED WITH THE SYSTEM POINTS TO A SEVERE THREAT  
TUESDAY AS WELL.  
 
IT IS ALSO WORTH NOTING THAT WITH ANY THUNDERSTORM COMPLEX  
SUNDAY AND MONDAY, WITH SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW, ANY LINE THAT  
ORIENTS SOUTHWEST TO NORTHEAST COULD BRING THE POTENTIAL FOR A  
SLOWING SYSTEM AND TRAINING HEAVY THUNDERSTORMS. WITH ESATS  
SUGGESTING >99TH PERCENTILE MOISTURE IN PLACE, ANY TRAINING  
THUNDERSTORMS COULD LEAD TO FLASH FLOODING. THE BEST CHANCE  
WOULD BE SUNDAY NIGHT AND MONDAY NIGHT WITH ANY SLOWING  
THUNDERSTORM COMPLEX.  
 
COOLER LATE NEXT WEEK:  
 
WITH THE MAIN SYSTEM FINALLY MOVING THROUGH, TEMPERATURES WILL  
COOL DOWN INTO THE MIDDLE TO UPPER 60S NEXT WEDNESDAY AND  
THURSDAY. A SIGNAL FOR ANOTHER STORM SYSTEM EXISTS FOR NEXT  
FRIDAY AS HIGHS WARM INTO THE LOWER 70S, HOWEVER, MODEL  
CERTAINTY IS LOW AT THIS TIME.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SATURDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1204 PM CDT FRI MAY 16 2025  
 
FOR THE 18Z TAFS, CONVECTION HAS STARTED DEVELOPING AHEAD OF A  
FRONTAL BOUNDARY PUSHING INTO THE AREA FROM THE WEST. THE  
CONVECITON STRETCHED FROM NEAR SPRINGFIELD TO BRANSON, BUT WAS  
QUICKLY MOVING OFF TO THE EAST-NORTHEAST. HAVE THROWN A PROB30  
GROUP IN FOR BBG UNTIL 20Z, BUT MOST LIKELY CONVECTION WILL BE  
EAST OF THE AREA BY THE ONSET OF THE 18Z TAFS. SHOULD SEE  
CONDITIONS BECOME VFR BY ABOUT 20-21Z THROUGH THE REMAINDER OF  
THE PERIOD. THE GUSTY WINDS OUT OF THE SOUTHWEST WILL DIMINISH  
BY THIS EVENING AND THEN BECOME LIGHT AND VARIABLE DURING THE  
EVENING AND OVERNIGHT PERIOD.  
 
 
   
SGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
KS...NONE.  
MO...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
MESOSCALE...TITUS  
SHORT TERM...PRICE  
LONG TERM...PRICE  
AVIATION...LINDENBERG  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab MO Page
The Nexlab KS Page
Main Text Page