355  
FXUS02 KWBC 110704  
PMDEPD  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD  
304 AM EDT TUE MAR 11 2025  
 
VALID 12Z FRI MAR 14 2025 - 12Z TUE MAR 18 2025  
 
 
...HEAVY RAIN/FLOODING AND SEVERE WEATHER POSSIBLE FOR THE  
MISSISSIPPI/OHIO/TENNESSEE VALLEYS AND SOUTHEAST LATE WEEK...  
 
...WIDESPREAD HIGH WINDS CAUSE FIRE DANGER IN THE SOUTHERN PLAINS  
AND LOCALIZED BLIZZARD CONDITIONS IN THE NORTH-CENTRAL CONUS...  
   
..MULTIPLE ROUNDS OF PRECIPITATION LIKELY IN THE WEST
 
 
   
..OVERVIEW
 
 
THE FIRST WEATHER FEATURE OF CONCERN LATE THIS WEEK WILL BE AN  
UPPER TROUGH WITH EMBEDDED UPPER LOW SUPPORTING A STRENGTHENING  
SURFACE LOW IN THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS AS THE PERIOD BEGINS FRIDAY.  
THIS LOW WILL TRACK NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE UPPER MIDWEST INTO  
SATURDAY WITH POTENT COLD FRONTS TO ITS SOUTH. HAZARDS ASSOCIATED  
WITH THE SURFACE LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL INCLUDE HEAVY RAIN AND  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY BEGINNING FRIDAY AND  
INTO THE SOUTHEAST AND TENNESSEE/LOWER OHIO VALLEYS SATURDAY.  
CONVECTION SHOULD REACH THE EASTERN SEABOARD SUNDAY. SNOW IS  
POSSIBLE ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE LOW IN THE NORTHERN HALF OF THE  
PLAINS INTO THE UPPER MIDWEST FRIDAY-SATURDAY. MEANWHILE AREAS OF  
STRONG WINDS ARE LIKELY, WHICH COULD CAUSE FIRE DANGER ESPECIALLY  
IN THE SOUTHERN PLAINS. WARMER THAN NORMAL TEMPERATURES WILL BE  
COMMON AHEAD OF THE LOW AND ITS COLD FRONTS, WITH COOLER  
TEMPERATURES BEHIND. BEHIND THAT LOW, ANOTHER UPPER TROUGH IS  
FORECAST TO APPROACH THE WEST THIS WEEKEND AND SPREAD ADDITIONAL  
PRECIPITATION THERE, LASTING INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
   
..GUIDANCE/PREDICTABILITY ASSESSMENT
 
 
MODEL GUIDANCE CONTINUES TO SHOW REASONABLY GOOD AGREEMENT FOR THE  
LARGER SCALE FEATURES THROUGH THE MEDIUM RANGE. THE UPPER TROUGH  
AND EMBEDDED UPPER LOW OVER THE CENTRAL U.S. WILL ALLOW FOR A  
STRONG SURFACE LOW TO CONSOLIDATE IN THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS. THE  
SURFACE LOW LOOKS TO BE AROUND 980MB EARLY FRIDAY AND IN THE 970S  
EARLY SATURDAY IN THE UPPER MIDWEST, PER THE AVERAGE OF MODELS AND  
ENSEMBLE MEMBERS. ON SMALLER SCALES, MODELS VARY A BIT MORE WITH  
FORECAST ASPECTS LIKE THE POSITIONING OF BACKDOOR FRONTS IN THE  
EAST LATE THIS WEEK. AI/ML MODELS HAVE TENDED TO SHOW THE FRONT  
FARTHER SOUTH FOR COOLER MID-ATLANTIC TEMPERATURES THAN THE  
DETERMINISTIC GUIDANCE. ANOTHER AREA OF MINOR UNCERTAINTY IS WITH  
POSSIBLE SECONDARY LOWS DEVELOPING IN THE GREAT LAKES REGION BEHIND  
THE MAIN LOW TRACK. BUT OVERALL, A DETERMINISTIC MODEL BLEND  
FAVORING THE ECMWF AND GFS WORKED WELL FOR THE EARLY PART OF THE  
FORECAST PERIOD.  
 
MODEL SPREAD IS A LITTLE GREATER WITH THE NEXT UPPER TROUGH  
APPROACHING THAT SHOULD BE LOCATED OVER THE EASTERN PACIFIC EARLY  
NEXT WEEK. MODELS HAVE VARIED ON THE DEPTH OF A SURFACE LOW NEAR  
VANCOUVER ISLAND OR THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST OVER THE PAST COUPLE OF  
DAYS, BUT RECENT 00Z GUIDANCE IS MORE AGREEABLE FOR A RELATIVELY  
DEEP LOW. WHILE MODELS GENERALLY AGREE IN THE BROAD UPPER TROUGH  
AXIS PIVOTING SOUTH AND EAST EARLY NEXT WEEK, SOME MODELS ALSO SHOW  
SOME ENERGY EJECTING EAST AS A NORTHERN TIER SHORTWAVE. THE 12Z  
ECMWF WAS PARTICULARLY AGGRESSIVE WITH THE SHORTWAVE SUPPRESSING  
THE NORTHERN SIDE OF THE UPPER RIDGE IN BETWEEN THE TWO MAIN  
TROUGHS, AND PRODUCED A SURFACE LOW NEAR THE NORTH DAKOTA/CANADA  
BORDER BY EARLY MONDAY. LEANED AWAY FROM THIS AS OTHER MODELS,  
INCLUDING THE THE EC-BASED AI/ML MODELS, WERE NOT ON BOARD.  
HOWEVER, THE INCOMING 00Z MODEL SUITE DOES SHOW SOME HINTS OF A  
SHORTWAVE AND SURFACE LOW. YET ANOTHER SURFACE LOW, THOUGH LIKELY  
MUCH WEAKER, COULD DEVELOP IN THE HIGH PLAINS EARLY NEXT WEEK AHEAD  
OF THE SECOND WEST TROUGH. GIVEN THE INCREASING MODEL SPREAD, THE  
WPC FORECAST INCREASED THE PROPORTION OF ENSEMBLE MEANS IN THE  
BLEND TO HALF DAY 6 AND A BIT MORE DAY 7 TO REDUCE INDIVIDUAL MODEL  
DIFFERENCES.  
 
   
..WEATHER/HAZARDS HIGHLIGHTS
 
 
AS THE PRIMARY UPPER TROUGH MOVES INTO THE CENTRAL U.S., THERE IS  
HIGH CONFIDENCE IN SURFACE LOW DEVELOPMENT/CONSOLIDATION IN THE  
CENTRAL PLAINS BY FRIDAY WITH STRONG FRONTS AND NORTHEASTWARD  
PROGRESSION OF THE SYSTEM THEREAFTER. POTENTIAL EXISTS FOR THIS LOW  
TO CHALLENGE SOME SEA LEVEL PRESSURE RECORDS FOR MARCH FROM  
EASTERN NEBRASKA INTO PARTS OF MINNESOTA/WISCONSIN. ON THE BACKSIDE  
OF THE LOW, SNOW MAY BE POSSIBLE ACROSS THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS  
AND INTO THE DAKOTAS ON FRIDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT. THERE IS HIGHER  
CONFIDENCE FOR MEANINGFUL SNOW ACROSS THE EASTERN DAKOTAS INTO  
WESTERN MINNESOTA BY SATURDAY WRAPPING AROUND THE LOW. SOME OF  
THESE AREAS MAY INITIALLY SEE RAIN IN THE WARM SECTOR, AND A  
TRANSITION ZONE OF ICE IS ALSO POSSIBLE. WIDESPREAD HIGH WINDS IN  
THE CENTRAL U.S. ARE ANOTHER POTENTIAL HAZARD WITH THE LOW. IN  
NORTHERN AREAS, LOCATIONS THAT RECEIVE SNOW COULD ALSO RECEIVE  
BLIZZARD CONDITIONS FRIDAY-SATURDAY GIVEN THE STRONG WINDS.  
MEANWHILE FARTHER SOUTH, HIGH WINDS IN THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES AND  
SOUTHERN PLAINS WILL CAUSE FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS.  
 
RAIN AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES WILL EMERGE AHEAD OF THE COLD FRONT  
ACROSS THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY ON FRIDAY. THE STORM PREDICTION  
CENTER IS HIGHLIGHTING SEVERE POTENTIAL THERE. MOST GUIDANCE (ASIDE  
FROM GFS RUNS) SHOWS HEAVY RAIN RATES BEGINNING LATE FRIDAY INTO  
FRIDAY NIGHT THAT COULD CAUSE FLOODING CONCERNS. THE DAY 4/FRIDAY  
ERO MAINTAINS A MARGINAL RISK FOR THE LOWER/MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI  
VALLEY AND MID-SOUTH ON FRIDAY. BY SATURDAY, RAIN TOTALS ARE  
FORECAST TO BECOME EVEN HEAVIER AS THE LARGER SYSTEM SLOWS AND SOME  
TRAINING OF HIGH RAIN RATES IS POSSIBLE IN AN UNSTABLE ENVIRONMENT  
WITH GOOD DYNAMICS FOR LIFT. THE FIRST TAKE AT THE DAY 5/SATURDAY  
ERO SHOWS A SLIGHT RISK OF FLASH FLOODING ACROSS MUCH OF ALABAMA  
AND TENNESSEE AND NEARBY, WHILE A SURROUNDING MARGINAL RISK REACHES  
FROM THE CENTRAL GULF COAST INTO THE OHIO VALLEY. SPC ALSO  
INDICATES SEVERE POTENTIAL FOR SIMILAR AREAS SATURDAY. RAIN AND  
THUNDERSTORMS AREA LIKELY TO PUSH ACROSS THE EAST ON SUNDAY AHEAD  
OF THE COLD FRONT CONTINUING EASTWARD.  
 
ADDITIONAL ROUNDS OF PRECIPITATION ARE LIKELY IN THE WEST LATE  
THIS WEEK INTO THE WEEKEND WITH MULTIPLE FRONTAL SYSTEMS CHANNELING  
PACIFIC MOISTURE INLAND. RAIN AMOUNTS IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST TO  
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA LOOK TO STAY BELOW THRESHOLDS FOR ANY EXCESSIVE  
RAINFALL RISK THROUGH FRIDAY, BUT CHANCES FOR HEAVY PRECIPITATION  
(LOWER ELEVATION RAIN AND HIGHER ELEVATION SNOW) COULD INCREASE BY  
THE WEEKEND FOR THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST INTO CALIFORNIA. CURRENT  
FORECASTS SHOW A WEAK TO MODERATE ATMOSPHERIC RIVER COMING INTO THE  
PACIFIC NORTHWEST SATURDAY NIGHT AND MOVING SOUTHWARD INTO  
CALIFORNIA ON SUNDAY. HELD OFF FROM DELINEATING ANY AREA IN THE DAY  
5/SATURDAY ERO AS THE COASTAL PACIFIC NORTHWEST IS NOT VERY  
SENSITIVE TO HEAVY RAIN, BUT SOME LOCALIZED RAIN RATES OF AN INCH  
PER HOUR OR MORE ARE POSSIBLE, WHICH COULD MAKE THE FLOODING RISK  
NONZERO. THE AR CURRENTLY LOOKS TO WEAKEN AS IT PUSHES INTO CENTRAL  
AND SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA SUNDAY, HOPEFULLY PRECLUDING TOO MANY  
FLOODING ISSUES OVER RECENT BURN SCARS. PRECIPITATION IS ALSO  
LIKELY FARTHER EAST INTO THE INTERIOR WEST AND ROCKIES THROUGH THIS  
WEEKEND AND EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES ARE LIKELY OVER THE EASTERN HALF OF THE  
COUNTRY FRIDAY. TEMPERATURE ANOMALIES OF 20 TO AS MUCH AS 35  
DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL ARE FORECAST FRIDAY FOR THE UPPER MIDWEST AS  
HIGHS REACH THE 60S AND 70S. FARTHER SOUTH, TEMPERATURES IN TEXAS  
INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY COULD REACH THE 80S WHILE  
LOCALIZED AREAS LIKE FAR SOUTH TEXAS CAN EXPECT 90S, EVEN  
APPROACHING 100F. WARMER THAN NORMAL TEMPERATURES WILL GRADUALLY  
SHRINK IN AREA INTO THE WEEKEND AS POSSIBLY MULTIPLE COLD FRONTS  
TRACK EAST. TEMPERATURES OF 20 TO 30 DEGREES ABOVE AVERAGE WILL BE  
MORE LIMITED TO THE GREAT LAKES ON SATURDAY, AND WARMER THAN NORMAL  
TEMPERATURES BY 15-25F ARE LIKELY IN THE NORTHEAST OVER THE  
WEEKEND. THERE COULD BE A FEW DAILY RECORD HIGHS ISOLATED ACROSS  
THE CENTRAL TO EASTERN U.S., BUT THERE COULD BE MORE WIDESPREAD  
RECORD WARM LOWS FROM THE MIDWEST THROUGH THE EAST FRIDAY-SUNDAY IF  
THE MORNING MINS HOLD FOR THE CALENDAR DAY. AFTER NEAR NORMAL  
TEMPERATURES RETURN, TEMPERATURES MAY WARM TO ABOVE AVERAGE AGAIN  
IN THE CENTRAL AND EASTERN U.S. EARLY NEXT WEEK WITH ANOTHER BOUT  
OF UPPER RIDGING. MEANWHILE IN THE WEST, THE INITIAL UPPER  
TROUGHING WILL PROMOTE BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES ACROSS THE REGION  
FRIDAY INTO SATURDAY. HIGHS ARE FORECAST TO BE GENERALLY BELOW  
AVERAGE BY 15-20 DEGREES FOR THE CENTRAL GREAT BASIN AND SOUTHWEST,  
WHILE LOWS OF 5-15 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL ARE LIKELY. TEMPERATURES  
SHOULD MODERATE SOMEWHAT BY SUNDAY AS THE TROUGH PULLS AWAY, BUT  
ANOTHER TROUGH APPROACHING COULD LEAD TO ANOTHER ROUND OF COOL  
TEMPERATURES THERE EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
TATE  
 
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  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab HPC Page Main Text Page