673  
FXUS02 KWBC 241858  
PMDEPD  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD  
258 PM EDT WED APR 24 2024  
 
VALID 12Z SAT APR 27 2024 - 12Z WED MAY 01 2024  
 
***SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS AND HEAVY RAIN EXPECTED FOR THE PLAINS AND  
MIDWEST OVER THE WEEKEND***  
 
   
..GENERAL OVERVIEW  
 
AN AMPLIFIED UPPER LEVEL FLOW PATTERN WILL TO BE IN PLACE ACROSS  
THE CONTINENTAL U.S. THIS WEEKEND, WITH A BUILDING RIDGE ACROSS THE  
EAST AND A TROUGH ACROSS THE WEST/HIGH PLAINS. BEHIND A LEADING  
UPPER MIDWEST SHORTWAVE, ANOTHER VIGOROUS SYSTEM WILL EJECT INTO  
THE PLAINS AND CONTINUE THE THREAT FOR HEAVY RAIN AND STRONG TO  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS, ESPECIALLY FROM CENTRAL TEXAS TO  
IOWA/MISSOURI. A PRONOUNCED WARMING TREND IS LIKELY FOR THE  
EASTERN HALF OF THE U.S. GOING INTO THE BEGINNING OF NEXT WEEK, AND  
COLDER TEMPERATURES OUT WEST WILL SUPPORT LATE SEASON SNOWFALL FOR  
THE HIGHER TERRAIN OF THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN ROCKIES. THE  
UNSEASONABLE COLD SHOULD EXTEND INTO THE NORTHERN PLAINS FOR A DAY  
OR SO AS WELL. EXPECT A SECOND UPPER TROUGH TO SETTLE NEAR THE WEST  
COAST BY THE MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK AS AN UPPER LOW NOW OVER THE  
BERING SEA APPROACHES VANCOUVER ISLAND OR THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST.  
 
   
..GUIDANCE/PREDICTABILITY ASSESSMENT  
 
MOST DYNAMICAL MODELS/ENSEMBLE MEANS AND ECMWF-INITIALIZED MACHINE  
LEARNING MODELS SHOW BETTER THAN AVERAGE AGREEMENT WITH MOST  
ASPECTS OF THE FORECAST THROUGH THE PERIOD. WITH TIMING  
DISCREPANCIES FOR THE SUNDAY PLAINS STORM SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCED  
FROM 24 HOURS AGO, PRIMARY DIFFERENCES THAT REMAIN ARE LATER IN THE  
PERIOD AND INVOLVE DETAILS OF THE UPPER TROUGH NEARING THE WEST  
COAST, LEADING ENERGY, AND SOME DETAILS OVER THE NORTHEAST. LATEST  
CMC RUNS PRODUCE MOST OF THESE DIFFERENCES--BEING MORE CLOSED WITH  
UPSTREAM ENERGY FEEDING INTO THE EAST PACIFIC/WEST COAST UPPER  
TROUGH, MORE AMPLIFIED WITH A LEADING SHORTWAVE TRACKING NEAR THE  
CANADIAN BORDER BY MIDWEEK, AND THE 00Z RUN IN PARTICULAR SHOWING A  
SUPPRESSED SURFACE PATTERN OVER THE NORTHEAST. THE MIDWEEK WEST  
COAST UPPER TROUGH HAS TRENDED A LITTLE DEEPER IN CONSENSUS,  
PULLING BACK THE WESTERN U.S. PORTION OF THE FRONT TRAILING FROM  
THE SYSTEM TRAVERSING THE NORTHERN TIER BY WEDNESDAY. MEANWHILE,  
INDIVIDUAL ENSEMBLE MEMBERS DEVELOP QUITE A BIT OF SPREAD FOR THE  
CHARACTER OF THE MODEST UPPER TROUGH NEARING THE EAST COAST BY THE  
MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK BUT AVERAGES OF THE DYNAMICAL/MACHINE LEARNING  
MODELS AND THE ENSEMBLE MEANS HAVE BEEN SIMILAR AND STEADY WITH THE  
DEPICTION OF THIS TROUGH SO FAR. THE CURRENT ARRAY OF GUIDANCE  
SUPPORTED AN OPERATIONAL MODEL COMPOSITE (WITH GREATER GFS/ECMWF  
EMPHASIS) FOR THE FIRST HALF OF THE PERIOD AND THEN A TRANSITION TO  
A MODEL/MEAN BLEND ALONG WITH EVENTUAL ELIMINATION OF CMC INPUT.  
 
   
..WEATHER/HAZARDS HIGHLIGHTS  
 
 
THE OVERALL SYNOPTIC ENVIRONMENT WILL BE INCREASINGLY CONDUCIVE FOR  
EPISODES OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE  
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN PLAINS AND INTO PORTIONS OF THE MIDWEST STATES  
OVER THE WEEKEND. THERE WILL LIKELY BE MULTIPLE MESOSCALE  
CONVECTIVE SYSTEMS THAT DEVELOP FROM CENTRAL TEXAS TO MISSOURI, AND  
THERE IS A GOOD CHANCE OF TRAINING CONVECTION GIVEN THE SLOW  
OVERALL PROGRESSION OF THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY AND NEARLY  
UNIDIRECTIONAL FLOW THROUGH THE LOWER TO MIDDLE TROPOSPHERE. FOR  
THE DAY 4 PERIOD SATURDAY, THE SLIGHT RISK AREA EXTENDING FROM  
NORTH-CENTRAL TEXAS TO AROUND THE IOWA-MISSOURI BORDER HAS BEEN  
MAINTAINED FROM PREVIOUS ISSUANCE. POTENTIAL CONTINUES FOR MULTIPLE  
CASES OF MCS DEVELOPMENT WITHIN THIS AREA AND RAINFALL RATES MAY  
REACH TWO INCHES PER HOUR WITH SOME STORMS. THE CORE OF THE  
HEAVIEST RAINFALL SHOULD SLOWLY PROGRESS EASTWARD FOR THE DAY 5  
PERIOD SUNDAY ACROSS THE ARKLATEX REGION AND INTO SOUTHERN  
MISSOURI, WHERE A SLIGHT RISK AREA PERSISTS GIVEN CONTINUED MULTI-  
MODEL SIGNAL FOR SOME 2-4 INCH TOTALS WHERE STORMS TRAIN OVER THE  
SAME AREAS. THERE IS A GOOD CHANCE THAT PORTIONS OF BOTH OUTLOOK  
AREAS MAY EVENTUALLY NEED A MODERATE RISK IN LATER FORECAST UPDATES  
IF THE QPF SIGNAL CONTINUES TO REMAIN ROBUST, SO THIS WILL  
CONTINUE TO BE CLOSELY MONITORED. THIS POTENTIAL MAY BE ENHANCED BY  
WET CONDITIONS FROM RAINFALL FORECAST OVER PORTIONS OF PLAINS AND  
VICINITY PRIOR TO THE DAYS 4-5 PERIOD. MEANWHILE THERE IS SOME  
UNCERTAINTY OVER POTENTIALLY GREATER NORTHEASTWARD EXTENT OF THE  
DAY 4 SLIGHT RISK AREA, AS SOME SOLUTIONS COULD ARGUE FOR, BUT WITH  
TOO MUCH SPREAD FOR SPECIFICS TO MAKE A CONFIDENT ADJUSTMENT AT  
THIS TIME. BEYOND EARLY MONDAY, DECELERATION OF THE FRONT REACHING  
THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY COULD CONTINUE THE THREAT FOR LOCALLY  
HEAVY RAINFALL OVER THAT REGION FOR ANOTHER DAY BEFORE THE FRONT  
WEAKENS AND EVENTUALLY DISSIPATES. THE MORE PROGRESSIVE NORTHERN  
PART OF THE FRONT SHOULD BRING LESSER RAINFALL TO THE GREAT LAKES  
AND NORTHEAST DURING THE FIRST HALF OF NEXT WEEK.  
 
ELSEWHERE ACROSS THE U.S., ANTICIPATE WIDESPREAD MODERATE TO  
LOCALLY HEAVY RAIN FROM MINNESOTA TO NORTHERN MICHIGAN ON SUNDAY  
AS THE SURFACE LOW LIFTS NORTHEASTWARD, AND A MARGINAL RISK AREA  
REFLECTS THIS POTENTIAL. ANOTHER AREA OF ENHANCED RAINFALL IS  
PROBABLE OVER NORTHEASTERN COLORADO AND PORTIONS OF ADJACENT  
STATES, WHERE A MARGINAL RISK REMAINS VALID FOR SATURDAY. COLDER  
TEMPERATURES MOVING IN ACROSS THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST AND THE  
ROCKIES BEHIND THIS STORM SYSTEM WILL LIKELY RESULT IN SEVERAL  
INCHES OF SNOW FOR THE HIGHER MOUNTAIN RANGES. FLOW AHEAD OF THE  
DEVELOPING EAST PACIFIC/WEST COAST UPPER TROUGH SHOULD SUPPORT  
MULTIPLE DAYS OF MOSTLY LIGHT TO MODERATE RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW  
OVER THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST FROM THIS WEEKEND THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF  
NEXT WEEK.  
 
TEMPERATURES WILL ALSO BE MAKING WEATHER HEADLINES AS MOST OF THE  
COUNTRY EAST OF THE ROCKIES WILL LIKELY TREND WELL ABOVE NORMAL BY  
THE WEEKEND INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK. EXPECT HIGHS TO RISE WELL INTO  
THE 80S FROM THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN PLAINS (90S TO AROUND 100 ON  
SATURDAY OVER THE TYPICALLY HOTTEST PARTS OF FAR SOUTHERN TEXAS) TO  
THE OHIO VALLEY AND THEN REACHING THE EAST COAST BY MONDAY,  
PERHAPS REACHING 90 DEGREES IN SOME CASES. THESE READINGS ARE ON  
THE ORDER OF 10-20 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL FOR LATE APRIL, AND THERE  
MAY BE SOME DAILY RECORD HIGHS SET. MORNING LOWS COULD REACH 20-25  
DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL OVER PARTS OF THE GREAT LAKES WITH POTENTIAL  
FOR RECORD WARM LOWS. ON THE OTHER HAND, LOCATIONS FROM THE  
INTERMOUNTAIN WEST INTO NORTHERN PLAINS SHOULD SEE A DAY OR SO WITH  
HIGHS 5-15 DEGREES BELOW AVERAGE DURING THE WEEKEND. NEXT WEEK'S  
PATTERN WILL FAVOR SOME MODERATION OVER THE EAST (BUT KEEPING  
TEMPERATURES SOMEWHAT ABOVE NORMAL) WHILE AREAS FROM THE CENTRAL  
U.S. THROUGH INTERMOUNTAIN WEST TREND 5-15 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL BY  
TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY. AT THAT TIME, MODESTLY BELOW NORMAL HIGHS  
SHOULD BE CONFINED TO THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST DUE TO THE NEARBY UPPER  
TROUGH.  
 
RAUSCH/HAMRICK  
 
ADDITIONAL 3-7 DAY HAZARD INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND ON THE WPC  
MEDIUM RANGE HAZARDS OUTLOOK CHART AT:  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/THREATS/THREATS.PHP  
 
WPC MEDIUM RANGE 500MB HEIGHTS, SURFACE SYSTEMS, WEATHER GRIDS,  
QUANTITATIVE PRECIPITATION FORECAST (QPF), EXCESSIVE RAINFALL  
OUTLOOK (ERO), WINTER WEATHER OUTLOOK (WWO) PROBABILITIES, HEAT  
INDICES, AND KEY MESSAGES CAN BE ACCESSED FROM:  
 
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/MEDR/5DAYFCST500_WBG.GIF  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/MEDR/5DAYFCST_WBG_CONUS.GIF  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/5KM_GRIDS/5KM_GRIDSBODY.HTML  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/QPF/DAY4-7.SHTML  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/#PAGE=ERO  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/WWD/PWPF_D47/PWPF_MEDR.PHP?DAY=4  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/HEAT_INDEX.SHTML  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/#PAGE=OVW  
 
 
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