865  
FXUS63 KSGF 070836  
AFDSGF  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SPRINGFIELD MO  
336 AM CDT SUN JUN 7 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- NUMEROUS BUT RATHER DISORGANIZED POCKET-SIZED SHOWER AND  
THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY EXPECTED ACROSS THE REGION THROUGHOUT  
TODAY AND TONIGHT (60-90% CHANCE).  
 
- MARGINAL (1 OF 5) RISK TODAY FOR ISOLATED WIND GUSTS UP TO 60  
MPH AND BRIEF AND/OR WEAK TORNADOES. SEVERE RISK WILL EXIST  
ANYTIME BETWEEN 10 AM AND 10 PM.  
 
- FLOOD WATCH ISSUED FOR 1 PM TODAY TO 1 PM MONDAY FOR AREAS  
ALONG AND WEST OF HWY 63. QUICK 2-3 INCH PER HOUR DOWNPOURS  
WILL PROMOTE A FLASH FLOODING RISK FOR AREAS THAT SEE REPEATED  
STORMS. TOTAL RAINFALL AMOUNTS OF 1-3 INCHES EXPECTED, WITH  
SPOTTY AMOUNTS UP TO 5-7 INCHES POSSIBLE.  
 
- ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES AND HUMIDITY NEXT WEEK WILL LEAD TO  
HEAT INDEX VALUES IN THE MID-90S TO LOWER 100S. FIRST HEAT OF  
THE SEASON AND WARM NIGHTTIME TEMPERATURES MAY HEIGHTEN HEAT-  
RELATED IMPACTS.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
 
 
ISSUED AT 330 AM CDT SUN JUN 7 2026  
 
A SOMEWHAT TROPICAL-ESQUE SYSTEM CONTINUES TO SLOWLY CHURN  
ACROSS THE CENTRAL PLAINS. WATER VAPOR AND INFRARED SATELLITE  
IMAGERY ACTUALLY SHOWED A DECENT CENTER OF CIRCULATION OVER  
OKLAHOMA AND KANSAS EARLY IN THE EVENING. THE CIRCULATION HAS  
BECOME A LITTLE LESS DEFINED THROUGH THE NIGHT AS IT STARTS TO  
EMBED INTO THE UPPER-LEVEL FLOW OVER THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS, MAKING  
IT BECOME MORE TROUGH-LIKE. OUR 00Z SOUNDING CONFIRMS THE  
TROPICAL NATURE OF THE SYSTEM WITH A SATURATED PROFILE NOTED ALL  
THE WAY THROUGH THE TROPOSPHERE, CHARACTERIZED BY NEAR 1.8-IN  
PWATS. DEEP CLOUDS AND MOISTURE WILL KEEP LOWS PRETTY MILD  
TONIGHT IN THE UPPER 60S TO LOWER 70S. RADAR IMAGERY ONLY SHOWS  
SPOTTY VERY LIGHT SHOWERS ACROSS THE AREA AT THE MOMENT, WHICH  
SHOULD CONTINUE THROUGH THE MORNING.  
 
NUMEROUS BUT RATHER DISORGANIZED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS TODAY:  
 
INSTABILITY IS CURRENTLY RATHER WEAK ACROSS THE AREA, BUT AS THE  
HYBRID CLOSED LOW/SHORTWAVE TROUGH AXIS SLOWLY LIFTS  
NORTHEASTWARD THIS MORNING, IT WILL ADVECT IN LOWER 70 F  
DEWPOINTS AS TEMPERATURES BEGIN TO WARM TO AROUND 80 F. THIS  
WILL GENERATE 1000-2000 J/KG OF SBCAPE ACROSS THE AREA, WITH  
POCKETS OF INSTABILITY UPWARDS OF 3000 J/KG. DUE TO THE DEEP,  
MOIST PROFILE OF FORECAST SOUNDINGS, THIS INSTABILITY WILL BE  
UNCAPPED. WITH THE LACK OF ANY BOUNDARY ACROSS THE AREA,  
SYNOPTIC-SCALE ASCENT FROM POSITIVE VORTICITY ADVECTION AHEAD OF  
THE TROUGH AXIS WILL BE THE MAIN SOURCE OF LIFT. SINCE THIS LIFT  
WILL BE SUBTLE BUT WIDESPREAD, EXPECT "SMALL-IN-AREA" SHOWERS  
AND THUNDERSTORMS TO BE NUMEROUS ACROSS THE WHOLE AREA  
THROUGHOUT THE DAY AND NIGHT (RATHER THAN FOCUSED ALONG A  
BOUNDARY DURING A SPECIFIC TIME). ANY SUBTLE SURFACE CONVERGENCE  
BOUNDARIES THAT DO DEVELOP WOULD FOCUS GREATER COVERAGE OF  
STORMS, BUT IN GENERAL, EXPECT NUMEROUS DISORGANIZED POCKET-  
SIZED SHOWERS AND STORMS THROUGHOUT THE DAY (60-90% CHANCE)  
 
MARGINAL RISK FOR BRIEF DAMAGING WIND GUSTS AND TORNADOES  
TODAY:  
 
WITH THE CLOSED LOW BECOMING MORE EMBEDDED IN THE STRONGER  
BACKGROUND FLOW, ALONG WITH THE SHORTWAVE TROUGH TAKING ON A  
MORE DEFINED AXIS, MID-LEVEL FLOW WILL BECOME SLIGHTLY ENHANCED  
ACROSS OUR REGION TODAY. THIS WILL INTRODUCE 25-35 KTS OF 0-6  
KM BULK SHEAR. RAP AND HREF MEMBERS DEPICT RANGES OF 10-20 KTS  
OF THAT SHEAR BEING FOCUSED IN THE LOW-LEVELS WITH SMALL BUT  
CURVED HODOGRAPHS GENERATING 100-200 M2/S2 SRH. COMBINED THIS  
WITH THE TROPICAL NATURE OF THE SYSTEM WITH TALL, SKINNY CAPE  
PROFILES, THE ENVIRONMENT WILL BE JUST CAPABLE ENOUGH FOR  
TROPICAL-CYCLONE-TYPE MINI SUPERCELLS. GIVEN THE ENVIRONMENT,  
THESE TYPE OF SUPERCELLS ARE GENERALLY CAPABLE OF PRODUCING  
ISOLATED BRIEF AND/OR WEAK TORNADOES. THIS WAS OBSERVED IN  
ARKANSAS YESTERDAY. SINCE THEIR ENVIRONMENT WILL BE ADVECTED  
INTO OUR AREA TODAY, THERE IS A MARGINAL (1 OF 5) RISK FOR A  
LOW 2% CHANCE OF BRIEF AND/OR WEAK TORNADOES WITHIN 25 MILES OF  
ANY GIVEN POINT IN SOUTHWEST MISSOURI AND SOUTHEAST KANSAS INTO  
THIS EVENING. ADDITIONALLY, BRIEF MICROBURSTS WITH WIND GUSTS  
UP TO 60 MPH WOULD ALSO BE POSSIBLE IN PRECIPITATION- LOADED  
DOWNDRAFTS.  
 
SINCE STORMS WILL NOT BE FOCUSED ALONG ANY BOUNDARY AND WILL  
GENERALLY BE DEVELOPING, MATURING, AND DISSIPATING THROUGHOUT  
THE DAY AND INTO THE EVENING, THIS SEVERE RISK WILL EXIST  
ANYTIME FROM 10 AM TO 10 PM, THOUGH MAY BE BEST FOCUSED AROUND  
12-8 PM WHEN THE BEST SHEAR/INSTABILITY OVERLAP.  
 
FLASH FLOOD WATCH IN EFFECT FROM 1 PM TODAY TO 1 PM MONDAY:  
 
IN ADDITION TO THE SEVERE RISK, THE TROPICAL-LIKE ENVIRONMENT  
WILL INTRODUCE AN EXCESSIVE RAINFALL AND FLASH FLOODING RISK  
ACROSS MUCH OF THE AREA. FORECAST PWATS NEAR 1.8-2.0 INCHES  
WILL BE ABOVE THE 99TH PERCENTILE FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR AS  
PORTRAYED BY NAEFS ESATS AND THE SPC SOUNDING CLIMATOLOGY.  
ADDITIONALLY, THERMODYNAMIC PROFILES WILL CONSIST OF TALL,  
SKINNY CAPE WITH A DEEP LCL TO FREEZING LEVEL LAYER. THIS WILL  
ALL PROMOTE HIGH RAIN RATES IN ANY SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS.  
OKLAHOMA AND ARKANSAS OBSERVED RATES OF 2-3 INCHES PER HOUR  
YESTERDAY. AGAIN, SINCE THEIR ENVIRONMENT WILL BE IN OUR AREA  
TODAY, WE CAN EXPECT THESE RAIN RATES TO OCCUR WITH ANY GIVEN  
STORM TODAY. FOR TODAY, THE FLASH FLOODING THREAT WILL NOT BE  
WHAT WE ARE NORMALLY USED TO WHERE STORMS TRAIN AND DUMP RAIN  
FOR HOURS ON END. SINCE STORMS WILL BE QUICK AND SOMEWHAT  
SMALL-IN-AREA, BUT NUMEROUS, THE FLOODING THREAT WILL OCCUR IN  
ANY AREAS THAT EXPERIENCE REPEATED STORM CELLS WITH 2-3 IN/HR  
RATES. THEREFORE, MANY AREAS MAY ONLY SEE UP TO 1-3 INCHES OF  
RAIN THROUGH MONDAY, WITH ONLY VERY SPOTTY STREAKS OF LOCALLY  
HIGHER AMOUNTS.  
 
THAT SAID, AS THE TROUGH AXIS TRAVERSES THE AREA LATER TONIGHT,  
THE NOCTURNAL LOW-LEVEL JET WILL RESPOND, INCREASING TO 20-25  
KTS. THIS WILL INTRODUCE ADDED WARM AIR ADVECTION AND ENHANCED  
LIFT ALONG THE CONVERGENT NOSE OF THE LLJ. THIS WOULD ADD SOME  
FOCUS FOR GREATER COVERAGE OF BACK-BUILDING (LONGER-LASTING)  
STORMS WHICH MAY INTRODUCE A MORE WIDESPREAD AND CONCERNING  
FLASH FLOODING THREAT. THE 00Z CAM SUITE HAS BEGUN TO HINT AT  
THIS SCENARIO WITH MOST MEMBERS DEPICTING A BACK-BUILDING  
COMPLEX OF STORMS SOMEWHERE OVER OUR AREA, BUT TIMING AND  
LOCATION ARE STILL VERY UNCERTAIN. THE NAM/NSSL MODELS PLACE  
THESE TOWARD SOUTH-CENTRAL MO, WHILE THE FVR/RRFS MODELS PLACE  
THIS IN SOUTHEAST KS/NORTHEAST OK. THEN, ARW/HRRR SOMEWHERE IN  
BETWEEN THOSE TWO. WE'LL HAVE TO MONITOR TRENDS FOR GREATER  
AGREEMENT, BUT BOTTOM LINE IS THAT IF ONE OF THESE COMPLEXES  
DEVELOP LATE TONIGHT INTO MONDAY MORNING, A MORE WIDESPREAD  
FLASH FLOOD THREAT MAY MATERIALIZE. HREF AND REFS LPMMS DEPICT  
POCKETS OF 5-7+ INCHES OF RAIN WITHIN ANY COMPLEX, WHICH WOULD  
PROMOTE MORE "SERIOUS" FLASH FLOODING.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 330 AM CDT SUN JUN 7 2026  
 
MARGINAL SEVERE AND FLOOD THREAT EAST OF HIGHWAY 63 ON MONDAY:  
 
A LINGERING/DECAYING THUNDERSTORM COMPLEX SOMEWHERE OVER THE  
REGION APPEARS LIKELY MONDAY MORNING (40-60% CHANCE). THE  
LOCATION AND EVOLUTION OF THIS COMPLEX WILL DETERMINE THE  
RESULTING SEVERE/FLOODING THREAT INTO EARLY MONDAY AFTERNOON.  
CURRENTLY, THE TROUGH AXIS IS PROGGED TO EXIT THE AREA MONDAY  
AFTERNOON, LEAVING OUR AREA IN NORTHWEST FLOW. THAT SAID,  
INSTABILITY WILL STILL BE PLENTIFUL AND ANY LEFTOVER BOUNDARIES  
FROM MORNING STORMS COULD SPARK SOME MARGINALLY SEVERE (AND  
HEAVY RAIN) STORMS EAST OF HIGHWAY 63 DURING THE DAY. IF THE  
MORNING COMPLEX IS DEEP ENOUGH TO GENERATE AN MCV, PERHAPS A  
VERY ISOLATED TORNADO RISK DEVELOPS, BUT A DAMAGING WIND RISK  
APPEARS TO BE THE PRIMARY HAZARD AT THIS TIME.  
 
PERSISTENT HEAT ENTERS THE REGION FOR MUCH OF NEXT WEEK:  
 
ONCE THE WAVE EXITS THE REGION, GLOBAL ENSEMBLES SHOW A  
SHORTWAVE RIDGE AXIS SETTING UP OVER THE OZARKS AS AN ENERGETIC  
TROUGH ENTERS THE NORTHWESTERN CONUS. ESATS DEPICT THIS RIDGE TO  
POSSESS >97.5TH PERCENTILE MID-LEVEL GEOPOTENTIAL HEIGHTS FOR  
THIS TIME OF YEAR. THIS WILL BRING WARM TEMPERATURES IN THE  
LOWER 90S FOR TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. FURTHERMORE, THE LOW-  
LEVEL MOISTURE IN PLACE IS PROGGED TO BE >99.5TH PERCENTILE.  
THESE ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES AND HUMIDITY WILL LEAD TO HEAT  
INDEX VALUES RANGING FROM THE MIDDLE 90S TO THE LOWER 100S  
(REACHING NEAR 110 F IN SOME SPOTS), ESPECIALLY TUESDAY.  
 
WHILE THIS IS NOT UNCOMMON HEAT FOR THE OZARKS TO EXPERIENCE, IT  
IS RATHER ATYPICAL FOR EARLY JUNE AS CONTEXTUALIZED BY OUR  
"NORMAL" MAX HEAT INDEX OF AROUND 97 F FOR EARLY JUNE AS  
OUTLINED BY THE CPC. THE CPC GIVES AN 80-90% CHANCE OF EXCEEDING  
THIS ABOVE NORMAL HEAT INDEX THRESHOLD AT ANY POINT NEXT WEEK.  
WITH THIS BEING THE FIRST HEAT OF THE SEASON, NBM SPREADS  
FORECASTING IT TO BE OVER MULTIPLE DAYS, AND WITH WARM NIGHTTIME  
TEMPERATURES IN THE 70S PROVIDING LITTLE RELIEF, HEAT IMPACTS  
MAY BE SLIGHTLY HEIGHTENED FROM NORMAL 100-110 F HEAT INDEX  
IMPACTS. THIS IS REFLECTED WITH A WIDESPREAD MODERATE TO MAJOR  
RISK FOR HEAT-RELATED IMPACTS, ESPECIALLY WEDNESDAY AND  
THURSDAY. THIS MEANS THE HEAT WILL LIKELY AFFECT THOSE WITHOUT  
COOLING OR HYDRATION. EXTRA CARE FOR HEAT-RELATED IMPACTS SHOULD  
BE EXERCISED COME NEXT WEEK.  
 
THE EXACT LONGEVITY OF THE HEAT WAVE IS STILL A BIT IN QUESTION  
AS ENSEMBLE CLUSTERS DIVERGE A BIT ON SHORTWAVE AND RESULTING  
COLD FRONT PROGRESSIONS THURSDAY AND ONWARD. LATEST LREF TRENDS  
POINT TO A COLD FRONT MOVING THROUGH THURSDAY, BRINGING OUR NEXT  
CHANCE OF RAIN (50-60%). THIS WOULD "COOL" THINGS OFF TO NEAR  
NORMAL FOR THE REST OF THE WEEK. CLUSTERS ARE STILL A BIT  
DIVERGENT, THOUGH, SO TRENDS WILL CONTINUE TO BE MONITORED.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z MONDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1240 AM CDT SUN JUN 7 2026  
 
A MESSY FORECAST IS IN STORE FOR THE 06Z TAF PERIOD AS SATELLITE  
IMAGERY CONTINUES TO SHOW A SYSTEM SPIN AWAY IN KANSAS/OKLAHOMA.  
RADAR IMAGERY SHOWS A FEW LIGHT SHOWERS LIFTING NORTH IN THE  
VICINITY OF SGF AND BBG, WHICH MAY IMPACT VISIBILITIES AT THE  
TAF SITES THROUGH 12Z. AT THE SAME TIME, CIGS HAVE BEEN REPORTED  
TO BE MVFR AT JLN AND BBG, NEARING IFR. THESE WILL CONTINUE TO  
FLUCTUATE THROUGH AT LEAST 18Z BEFORE DAYTIME MIXING RAISES CIGS  
ABOVE MVFR THRESHOLDS.  
 
AFTER 12Z, NUMEROUS SMALL-IN-AREA SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE  
EXPECTED TO DEVELOP ACROSS THE REGION, CREATING A PROB30 FOR  
THUNDERSTORMS THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE PERIOD. MODEL GUIDANCE IS  
HONING ON A POTENTIAL WEAKLY ORGANIZED LINE OF STORMS MOVING  
THROUGH SGF AND BBG BETWEEN 17-21Z. HAVE OPTED TO PUT A TEMPO  
GROUP HERE FOR THE GREATER CONFIDENCE IN STORM IMPACT.  
 
WITH ANY OF THE SHOWERS AND STORMS, HEAVY DOWNPOURS AND  
LIGHTNING WILL BE THE MAIN RISK, WITH VISIBILITY DROPPING DOWN  
TO A MILE OR LOWER AT TIMES, IF IMPACTED DIRECTLY.  
 
OTHERWISE, WINDS WILL BE AT 8-13 KTS OUT OF THE SOUTHEAST FOR  
THE ENTIRE PERIOD.  
 

 
   
SGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
KS...FLOOD WATCH FROM 1 PM CDT THIS AFTERNOON THROUGH MONDAY  
AFTERNOON FOR KSZ073-097-101.  
MO...FLOOD WATCH FROM 1 PM CDT THIS AFTERNOON THROUGH MONDAY  
AFTERNOON FOR MOZ055-066>069-077>081-088>096-101>105.  
 

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...PRICE  
LONG TERM...PRICE  
AVIATION...PRICE  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab MO Page
The Nexlab KS Page Main Text Page