455  
FXUS64 KTSA 181141  
AFDTSA  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TULSA OK  
541 AM CST TUE NOV 18 2025  
   
..NEW AVIATION
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
UPDATED AT 538 AM CST TUE NOV 18 2025  
 
- WELL ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES TODAY (TUESDAY) AND WEDNESDAY.  
 
- UNSETTLED PATTERN BEGINS WEDNESDAY WITH INCREASING SHOWER AND  
THUNDERSTORM CHANCES. WIDESPREAD SHOWERS AND STORMS WEDNESDAY  
NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT.  
 
- A FEW STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS POSSIBLE WEDNESDAY WITH PRIMARY  
HAZARD BECOMING HEAVY RAINFALL AND ASSOCIATED FLOODING  
POTENTIAL THURSDAY INTO THURSDAY NIGHT.  
 
- COLD FRONT FRIDAY WILL DROP TEMPERATURES CLOSER TO SEASONAL  
NORMAL THIS WEEKEND AND INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
 
(THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 1030 PM CST MON NOV 17 2025  
 
A WARM FRONT CONTINUES TO LIFT NORTHEASTWARD ACROSS PORTIONS OF FAR  
NORTHEAST OK AND FAR NORTHWEST AR LATE THIS EVENING. A PASSING  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH, AS WELL AS A 40-50 KNOT LOW-LEVEL JET (EVIDENT IN  
LATEST VAD WIND PROFILE AT KINX) MAY HELP TO CONTRIBUTE IN  
DEVELOPING ISOLATED TO SCATTERED STORMS LATER TONIGHT OR EARLY THIS  
(TUESDAY) MORNING IN THE VICINITY OF THE BOUNDARY. IN FACT, WEAK  
ECHOES HAVE ALREADY DEVELOPED IN MUSKOGEE COUNTY AS OF THIS WRITING.  
ENOUGH MOISTURE AND ELEVATED INSTABILITY WILL BE IN PLACE FOR THE  
POTENTIAL OF A COUPLE OF STRONG TO MARGINALLY SEVERE STORMS,  
GENERALLY ACROSS FAR NORTHWEST AR AND FAR NORTHEAST OK. LARGE HAIL  
UP TO AN INCH IN DIAMETER WILL BE THE PRIMARY HAZARD WITH SEVERE  
STORMS. STORM AND PRECIPITATION CHANCES WILL TAPER OFF BY DAYBREAK  
THIS (TUESDAY) MORNING AS THE LOW-LEVEL JET WEAKENS AND THE WARM  
FRONT CONTINUES TO LIFT NORTHWARD.  
 
A WEAK, TRAILING COLD FRONT WILL SLOWLY MOVE INTO THE AREA FROM THE  
NORTHWEST THIS MORNING AND INTO THIS AFTERNOON BEFORE STALLING NEAR  
THE RED RIVER TONIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY MORNING. WINDS WILL GRADUALLY  
TURN NORTHWEST/NORTH FOLLOWING THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY, AND IN TURN  
WILL ADVECT DRIER AIR INTO THE AREA. TEMPERATURES WILL WARM UP QUITE  
A BIT AHEAD OF THE WEAK FRONT IN THE AFTERNOON, REACHING THE LOW-MID  
80S ALONG AND SOUTH OF I-40; BEHIND THE FRONT, TEMPS WARM UP INTO  
THE MID-UPPER 70S. THE DRIER AIRMASS FOLLOWING THE BOUNDARY MAY  
CAUSE LIMITED FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS IN THE AFTERNOON, ESPECIALLY IN  
NORTHEAST OK. TRANQUIL AND DRY WEATHER WILL CONTINUE INTO TUESDAY  
NIGHT. THE DRIER AIRMASS WILL HELP COOL TEMPERATURES DOWN INTO THE  
40S AND 50S IN MOST PLACES, NEAR 60 DEGREES ALONG THE RED RIVER.  
 
MEJIA  
 

 
   
LONG TERM
 
 
(WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY) ISSUED AT 1030 PM CST MON NOV 17 2025  
 
THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY FROM TODAY WILL LIFT BACK NORTHWARD ON  
WEDNESDAY, INCREASING THETA-E AND DEWPOINT TEMPERATURES INTO EASTERN  
OK AND NORTHWEST AR. AN UPPER-LEVEL LOW WILL MOVE OVER SOUTHERN CA  
TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY MORNING AND SOUTHWEST WINDS ALOFT WILL  
TAKE SHAPE AND BRING IN MID AND HIGH CLOUDS. AFTER A MOSTLY DRY AND  
MOSTLY UNEVENTFUL MORNING ON WEDNESDAY, A LEAD VORT MAX WILL ARRIVE  
BY THE AFTERNOON AND WILL CAUSE SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS  
TO DEVELOP, FIRST ACROSS SOUTHEAST OK, THEN SPREADS NORTHEASTWARD  
OVER THE REGION BY WEDNESDAY EVENING/NIGHT AND INTO THURSDAY.  
INSTABILITY WILL INCREASE AS THE VORT MAX MOVE OVER THE AREA  
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. MODEL SOUNDINGS CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE  
POTENTIAL FOR STRONG TO MARGINALLY SEVERE STORMS WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON/EVENING. HOWEVER, INSTABILITY SHOULD BEGIN TO DECREASE  
WEDNESDAY EVENING INTO THURSDAY MORNING.  
 
THE MAIN CONCERN IN THE LONG-TERM PERIOD CONTINUES TO BE A HEAVY  
RAIN AND FLOODING POTENTIAL BEGINNING LATE WEDNESDAY NIGHT AND  
PERSISTING THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT. PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES WILL  
INCREASE TO NEAR THE 99TH PERCENTILE, IN EXCESS OF 1.5 INCHES,  
ACROSS MUCH OF THE CWA BY THURSDAY MORNING. FORECAST MODELS CONTINUE  
TO DISAGREE ON WHERE THE BULLS-EYE OF HEAVIEST RAIN WILL FALL  
THROUGH FRIDAY, BUT HAVE GENERALLY TRENDED WITH A RANGE BETWEEN 1-3  
INCHES ACROSS THE ENTIRE CWA, BUT LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS ARE  
PROBABLE. WILL CONTINUE TO MONITOR TRENDS AND HOPEFULLY HAVE A  
BETTER GRASP ON QPF OVER THE NEXT 12-24 HOURS.  
 
THE UPPER-LEVEL LOW WILL GRADUALLY MOVE OVER THE PLAINS LATE  
THURSDAY NIGHT INTO FRIDAY MORNING AND RAIN CHANCES WILL BEGIN TO  
DECREASE FROM WEST-TO-EAST THROUGH THE MORNING AND AFTERNOON FRIDAY  
AS DETERMINISTIC MODELS HAVE PERSISTENTLY SHOWN A DRY SLOT WRAPPING  
AROUND THE BASE OF THE LOW. A FEW LINGERING SHOWERS MAY PERSIST NEAR  
THE CENTER OF THE LOW, WHICH IS FORECAST TO MOVE ACROSS THE KS/OK  
AND MO/AR BORDERS FRIDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING. AN ASSOCIATED COLD  
FRONT TO THE UPPER LOW IS FORECAST TO MOVE THROUGH THE AREA FRIDAY  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING. TEMPERATURES SHOULD DROP CLOSER TO SEASONAL  
AVERAGE FOR THE UPCOMING WEEKEND AND INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK. ANOTHER  
STORM SYSTEM MAY IMPACT THE AREA BY SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MONDAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
(12Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 538 AM CST TUE NOV 18 2025  
 
MVFR CEILINGS AT THE SOUTHEAST OKLAHOMA AND NORTHWEST ARKANSAS  
SITES WILL SCATTER OUT AROUND MID MORNING AT KMLC AND AROUND  
MIDDAY AT THE ARKANSAS SITES. FOG WILL REDUCE VISIBILITIES FOR THE  
FIRST COUPLE HOURS OF THE FORECAST PERIOD AT KBVO. VFR CONDITIONS  
WILL PREVAIL AT ALL SITES THIS AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT. SOUTHWEST  
WINDS WILL GUST TO NEAR OR ABOVE 20 KNOTS AT THE NORTHWEST  
ARKANSAS SITES TODAY BEFORE DIMINISHING BY LATE AFTERNOON.  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
TUL 77 48 74 60 / 0 0 10 60  
FSM 84 54 79 62 / 0 0 10 70  
MLC 84 53 81 63 / 0 0 10 70  
BVO 75 43 70 54 / 0 0 10 60  
FYV 79 48 75 59 / 0 0 10 70  
BYV 78 49 73 59 / 0 0 10 60  
MKO 80 50 77 61 / 0 0 10 70  
MIO 75 47 72 58 / 0 0 0 70  
F10 80 50 77 61 / 0 0 10 70  
HHW 84 60 82 63 / 0 0 10 70  
 

 
   
TSA WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
OK...NONE.  
AR...NONE.  

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...67  
LONG TERM....67  
AVIATION...05  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab OK Page
The Nexlab AR Page Main Text Page