675  
FXUS63 KSGF 240808  
AFDSGF  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SPRINGFIELD MO  
308 AM CDT WED JUN 24 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- MARGINAL RISK (LEVEL 1 OF 5) FOR SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TODAY  
GENERALLY SOUTHWEST OF HIGHWAY 65. THE PRIMARY HAZARD WOULD BE  
LOCALIZED DAMAGING WIND GUSTS UP TO 60MPH.  
 
- MARGINAL (LEVEL 1 OF 5) TO SLIGHT (LEVEL 2 OF 5) RISK FOR  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ON THURSDAY. DAMAGING WIND GUSTS AND  
LARGE HAIL WILL BE THE MAIN RISKS, WITH A LOWER RISK OF A  
TORNADO OR TWO.  
 
- DAILY SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES PERSIST THROUGH FRIDAY.  
AN ASSOCIATED HEAVY RAINFALL AND FLASH FLOODING RISK WILL  
ACCOMPANY EACH ROUND. A SLIGHT RISK (2 OF 4) FOR EXCESSIVE  
RAINFALL AND FLASH FLOODING CAPTURE THIS POTENTIAL INTO  
FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
 
 
ISSUED AT 237 AM CDT WED JUN 24 2026  
 
AN UPPER LEVEL HIGH PRESSURE SYSTEM IS CURRENTLY SITUATED OVER PARTS  
OF AZ/NM/TX, WITH A SHORTWAVE TROUGH CONTINUING TO PUSH SOUTHEAST  
THROUGH THE AREA DURING THE EARLY MORNING HOURS.  
 
OBSERVATIONS SHOW RELATIVE HUMIDITIES ACROSS A LARGE PORTION OF THE  
AREA IN THE UPPER 90% TO EVEN 100% RANGE. WITH THE RECENT RAINFALL  
FROM YESTERDAY'S COMPLEX LEADING TO SATURATED SOILS OVER SOUTHEAST  
KS/SOUTHWEST MO, SATELLITE IMAGERY SHOWS PATCHY AREAS OF FOG, WITH  
OBSERVATIONS DEPICTING LOWERED VISIBILITIES DOWN TO 2-5 MILES  
(WITH VERY LOCALIZED AREAS OCCASIONALLY DOWN TO 0.25 MILES) IN  
THAT GENERAL AREA. THE CONTINUED THOUGHT IS THAT THIS SHOULDN'T  
GET WIDESPREAD OR DENSE ENOUGH TO WARRANT A DENSE FOG ADVISORY,  
BUT WE'LL CONTINUE TO WATCH THE TRENDS OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS  
SO SEE IF ONE ENDS UP BEING NEEDED.  
 
THE SHOWER/THUNDERSTORM COMPLEX THAT PUSHED THROUGH SOUTHEAST  
KS/SOUTHWEST MO EARLIER YESTERDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING ENDED UP  
WORKING OVER THE ATMOSPHERE, LEADING TO THE BETTER INSTABILITY BEING  
PUSHED FURTHER SOUTH THAN ORIGINALLY ANTICIPATED. ADDITIONALLY, THE  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH AND ASSOCIATED INSTABILITY GRADIENT THAT LED TO THE  
DEVELOPMENT OF THE STRONG TO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM COMPLEX CURRENTLY  
OVER THE PLAINS WAS REALIZED FURTHER WEST THAN ORIGINALLY  
ANTICIPATED. AS A RESULT, THAT COMPLEX WILL CONTINUE TO PUSH  
SOUTHEAST DURING THE MORNING HOURS, HOWEVER IT SHOULD MOSTLY REMAIN  
OUT OF OUR CWA AS IT MOVES THROUGH OKLAHOMA INTO NORTHWEST  
ARKANSAS. WITH THE UPPER LEVEL DISTURBANCE MOVING THROUGH THE  
AREA OVERNIGHT, SOME ISOLATED SHOWERS NEAR THE MO/AR BORDER CAN  
BE SEEN ON RADAR, WHICH WILL CONTINUE TO BE POSSIBLE FOR AREAS  
PRIMARILY SOUTH OF HIGHWAY 60 OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS. LATEST  
TRENDS HOWEVER SHOW MUCH OF THE AREA REMAINING DRY THIS MORNING.  
 
AS THE DAY CONTINUES, ANOTHER SHORTWAVE TROUGH WILL MAKE ITS WAY  
THROUGH THE AREA, BRINGING SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS  
TO THE CWA. MOST OF THIS ACTIVITY SHOULD REMAIN SUB-SEVERE,  
HOWEVER AN ISOLATED STORM COULD GET STRONG ENOUGH TO PRODUCE  
LOCALIZED DAMAGING WIND GUSTS UP TO 60MPH. THIS WOULD PRIMARILY  
BE POSSIBLE OVER FAR SOUTHEAST KS AND FAR SOUTHWEST MO.  
OTHERWISE, TEMPERATURES SHOULD CLIMB INTO THE UPPER 70S/LOW 80S  
FOR MUCH OF THE AREA THIS AFTERNOON, WITH OVERNIGHT LOWS TONIGHT  
IN THE 60S.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 237 AM CDT WED JUN 24 2026  
 
THURSDAY WILL ONCE AGAIN BRING ACTIVE WEATHER AS ANOTHER  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH IS PROGGED TO PUSH THROUGH THE PLAINS AND INTO  
THE AREA BY THURSDAY EVENING. AS STORMS LOOK TO DEVELOP IN  
SOUTHERN KANSAS AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA, GUIDANCE SHOWS THEM  
PUSHING EAST INTO THE OZARKS DURING MID/LATE AFTERNOON AND INTO  
THE EVENING HOURS FOLLOWING AN INCREASE IN INSTABILITY. THERE  
REMAINS A QUESTION OF STORM MODE ONCE THEY REACH THE AREA, AS  
SUPERCELLS WILL BE POSSIBLE FURTHER WEST, WITH MORE OF A LINE  
SEGMENT/CLUSTER POSSIBILITY AS IT APPROACHES FAR SOUTHEAST  
KS/SOUTHWEST MO. ADDITIONALLY, THE EXACT TRACK OF THESE STORMS  
IS ALSO STILL A QUESTION, AS THAT WOULD BE DEPENDENT ON WHERE  
EXACTLY THEY DEVELOP. REGARDLESS, THE PRIMARY HAZARDS WILL BE  
LARGE HAIL AND DAMAGING WINDS, WITH A TORNADO OR TWO AS A  
LESSER, SECONDARY HAZARD. THE STORM PREDICTION CENTER HIGHLIGHTS  
AREAS WEST OF HIGHWAY 65 IN A SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2 OF 5) OF  
SEVERE WEATHER, WITH A MARGINAL RISK (1 OF 5) FOR A MAJORITY OF  
THE REMAINING CWA.  
 
ADDITIONAL SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL LIKELY DEVELOP IN THE  
WAKE OF THESE AFTERNOON/EVENING STORMS AND LINGER INTO FRIDAY,  
BRINGING A FLOODING RISK TO THE AREA. HIGH PWATS WILL ONCE AGAIN  
SUPPORT EFFICIENT RAINFALL RATES, AND ANY TRAINING  
SHOWERS/STORMS WILL LEAD TO A LOCALIZED FLASH FLOODING  
POTENTIAL. THE UNCERTAINTY WITH THIS LIES IN THE LOCATION OF THE  
HIGHEST FLOODING THREAT, AS THESE STORMS WILL BE MORE BANDED IN  
NATURE. SIMILAR TO THE SEVERE THREAT, THE HIGHEST RAINFALL (AND  
HENCE FLOODING THREAT) WILL BE DEPENDENT ON WHERE STORMS DEVELOP  
ON THURSDAY AND WHERE THE BAND OF SHOWERS/STORMS SETS UP. WPC  
HIGHLIGHTED THE ENTIRE AREA IN A SLIGHT RISK (2 OF 4) OF  
EXCESSIVE RAINFALL TO ACCOUNT FOR THE FLOODING POTENTIAL.  
 
LOOKING AHEAD TO THE END OF THE WEEKEND AND INTO NEXT WEEK,  
MODELS SHOW AN UPPER LEVEL RIDGE BUILDING OVER THE CENTRAL  
CONUS. THIS WILL LEAD TO WARMER TEMPERATURES AS THE MID-LEVEL  
HEIGHTS RISE, WITH THE NBM INTERQUARTILE SPREAD SHOWING THE  
25TH TO 75TH PERCENTILES IN THE LOW TO MID 90S.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1153 PM CDT TUE JUN 23 2026  
 
THE CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS HAS DECREASED FOR THE  
OVERNIGHT HOURS INTO EARLY WEDNESDAY HOWEVER ISOLATED STORMS  
COULD DEVELOP IN THE AFTERNOON AND HAVE USED PROB30 GROUPS FOR  
NOW. OTHERWISE CEILINGS AND VIS WILL LIKELY DROP INTO IFR AND  
MVFR THROUGH SUNRISE, ESPECIALLY AT JLN AND BBG. WINDS WILL  
REMAIN LIGHT OUT OF THE SOUTHEAST WITH SPEEDS LESS THAN 10KTS.  
 

 
   
SGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
KS...NONE.  
MO...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...MELTO  
LONG TERM...MELTO  
AVIATION...BURCHFIELD  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab MO Page
The Nexlab KS Page Main Text Page