550  
FXUS01 KWBC 031956  
PMDSPD  
 
SHORT RANGE FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD  
356 PM EDT THU APR 03 2025  
 
VALID 00Z FRI APR 04 2025 - 00Z SUN APR 06 2025  
 
...LIFE-THREATENING, CATASTROPHIC, AND POTENTIALLY HISTORIC FLASH  
FLOOD EVENT CONTINUES ACROSS THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY AND MID-SOUTH  
TO LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...  
 
...A COUPLE ROUNDS OF SIGNIFICANT SEVERE WEATHER EXPECTED FROM THE  
MID-SOUTH WEST THROUGH THE OZARKS AND ARKLATEX WITH VERY LARGE  
HAIL AND STRONG TORNADOES POSSIBLE...  
 
...MODERATE TO LOCALLY HEAVY SNOW SHOWERS EXPECTED FOR THE  
ROCKIES, WITH SOME SNOW SHOWERS SPREADING EASTWARD INTO THE HIGH  
AND NORTHERN/CENTRAL PLAINS...  
 
...WELL ABOVE AVERAGE, VERY WARM SPRING TEMPERATURES TO END THE  
WEEK ACROSS THE SOUTHEAST WITH NUMEROUS RECORD-TYING/BREAKING  
HIGHS POSSIBLE...  
 
A POWERFUL SPRING STORM SYSTEM WILL CONTINUE TO BRING THE THREAT  
OF LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING AND SIGNIFICANT SEVERE WEATHER  
FOCUSED ON THE OHIO VALLEY WEST-SOUTHWEST THROUGH THE MIDDLE/LOWER  
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, MID-SOUTH, AND ARKLATEX. A LEADING UPPER-LEVEL  
SHORTWAVE WITHIN A BROADER LARGE-SCALE TROUGH OVER THE  
WESTERN/CENTRAL U.S. AND ACCOMPANYING SURFACE LOW PRESSURE/FRONTAL  
SYSTEM WILL PRESS EASTWARD OVER THE NORTHEAST THURSDAY NIGHT, WITH  
A TRAILING COLD FRONT STRETCHING SOUTHWESTWARD THROUGH THE  
MID-ATLANTIC, OHIO VALLEY, MID-SOUTH, AND INTO THE SOUTHERN  
PLAINS. THE SOUTHERN PART OF THIS FRONTAL BOUNDARY IS SET TO STALL  
FOR THE NEXT FEW DAYS AS A BUILDING UPPER-LEVEL RIDGE OVER THE  
SOUTHEAST KEEPS IT STATIONARY. THE BLOCKING PATTERN HAS ALSO  
FOCUSED DEEP MOISTURE ALONG THE FRONT, WHICH WILL HELP TO FUEL  
CONTINUED ROUNDS OF INTENSE DOWNPOUR-PRODUCING THUNDERSTORMS  
THROUGHOUT THE REGION, BUT WITH A PARTICULAR FOCUS CENTERED ON THE  
LOWER OHIO VALLEY INTO THE MID-SOUTH AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY.  
STORM INITIATION AND MOVEMENT ROUGHLY PARALLEL TO THE BOUNDARY  
WILL LEAD TO REPEATED ROUNDS OF RAINFALL OVER THE SAME AREAS,  
INCLUDING THOSE ALREADY HARD HIT ON WEDNESDAY, LEADING TO  
SIGNIFICANT TO EXTREME, POTENTIALLY HISTORIC, RAINFALL TOTALS OVER  
INCREASINGLY SATURATED SOILS. HIGH RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL  
(LEVEL 4/4) ARE NOW IN EFFECT THROUGH SATURDAY. THROUGH THURSDAY  
NIGHT, AREAS OF EASTERN ARKANSAS INTO WESTERN TENNESSEE/KENTUCKY  
ARE THE MOST AT RISK FOR POSSIBLY WIDESPREAD LIFE-THREATENING  
FLASH FLOODING. ON FRIDAY, THE HIGH RISK SHIFTS WEST A BIT TO BE  
LOCATED FROM SOUTHERN MISSOURI ACROSS MUCH OF ARKANSAS AND THE  
ARKLATEX AS THE UPPER TROUGH PIVOTS AND BEST MOISTURE INFLOW  
SHIFTS WEST WITH IT. THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY TO THE MID-SOUTH AND  
ARKANSAS ARE UNDER A HIGH RISK ONCE AGAIN ON SATURDAY OVER AREAS  
THAT WILL SATURATED IF NOT ALREADY FLOODING BY THEN. MODERATE AND  
SLIGHT RISKS ARE IN PLACE FOR ALL THREE DAYS OVER BROADER AREAS OF  
THE OHIO VALLEY INTO THE SOUTH-CENTRAL U.S. WHERE SCATTERED TO  
NUMEROUS INSTANCES OF FLASH FLOODING CAN BE EXPECTED. THIS IS A  
CATASTROPHIC, POTENTIALLY HISTORIC HEAVY RAINFALL AND FLASH FLOOD  
EVENT, WITH SOME LOCATIONS POTENTIALLY SEEING RAINFALL AMOUNTS AS  
HIGH AS 10-15"+ THROUGH THE WEEKEND. THE REPEATING ROUNDS OF HEAVY  
RAINFALL EACH DAY WILL ALSO RAISE THE RISK OF WIDESPREAD  
SIGNIFICANT RIVER FLOODING, INCLUDING POTENTIALLY CATASTROPHIC  
MAJOR FLOODING, IN THE OZARKS, PORTIONS OF THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI  
VALLEY, AND MUCH OF THE OHIO VALLEY.  
 
IN ADDITION TO THE FLASH FLOOD THREAT, SIGNIFICANT SEVERE WEATHER  
WILL ALSO REMAIN A CONCERN FOR MANY OF THE SAME LOCATIONS OVER THE  
NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS. EMBEDDED SHORTWAVES WITHIN THE BROADER TROUGH  
WILL HELP TO BRING UPPER-LEVEL DYNAMIC SUPPORT AMIDST INTENSE  
LOW-LEVEL SOUTHERLY FLOW AND SUFFICIENT INSTABILITY TO SUPPORT  
SUPERCELLS. THE STORM PREDICTION CENTER HAS ISSUED AN ENHANCED  
RISK OF SEVERE WEATHER (LEVEL 3/5) FROM THE MID-SOUTH WEST THROUGH  
THE ARKLATEX THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT FOR THE THREAT OF A FEW  
TORNADOES, SOME OF WHICH COULD BE STRONG, VERY LARGE HAIL, AND  
DAMAGING WINDS. A BROADER SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2/5) EXTENDS ALONG  
THE BOUNDARY FROM THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS SOUTHWEST THOUGH THE  
TENNESSEE VALLEY/MID-SOUTH AND INTO NORTHERN TEXAS FOR THE THREAT  
OF LARGE HAIL, DAMAGING WINDS, AND A FEW TORNADOES. ON FRIDAY, THE  
RISK IS RAISED TO MODERATE FOR THE ARKLATEX FOR STRONG TORNADOES,  
VERY LARGE HAIL, AND DAMAGING WINDS. ONCE AGAIN A BROADER SLIGHT  
RISK IS IN PLACE FROM TEXAS THROUGH THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY. THEN  
SATURDAY, SLIGHT TO ENHANCED RISKS ARE DELINEATED FOR THE LOWER  
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY THROUGH THE MID-SOUTH AND OHIO VALLEY.  
 
A PAIR OF UPPER WAVES AND A PASSING COLD FRONT WILL HELP SUPPORT  
SNOW SHOWERS OVER THE ROCKIES AS WELL AS BRING THE CHANCE FOR SOME  
WINTRY PRECIPITATION TO THE HIGH AND NORTHERN/CENTRAL PLAINS THE  
NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS. TO THE NORTH, A NORTHERN STREAM UPPER WAVE  
DROPPING SOUTH FROM CANADA AND ACCOMPANYING SURFACE COLD FRONT  
WILL BRING MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOWS THURSDAY TO THE NORTHERN  
ROCKIES, AS WELL AS A WINTRY MIX OF RAIN AND SNOW SPREADING  
EASTWARD INTO PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN/CENTRAL PLAINS THURSDAY  
INTO FRIDAY. ACCUMULATIONS ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN LIGHT WITH SNOWS  
OVER THE PLAINS, THOUGH A CORRIDOR OF A FEW INCHES OF SNOW COULD  
FOCUS IN NORTH DAKOTA. TO THE SOUTH, AN UPPER-LEVEL SHORTWAVE IN  
THE BROADER WESTERN/CENTRAL U.S. TROUGH WILL PASS OVER THE FOUR  
CORNERS REGION AND CENTRAL/SOUTHERN ROCKIES AS AN AREA OF LOW  
PRESSURE IN THE LEE OF THE ROCKIES HELPS TO FOCUS UPSLOPE FLOW  
ALONG THE MOUNTAINS. MODERATE TO LOCALLY HEAVY SNOWS ARE EXPECTED  
INTO FRIDAY FOR THE REGIONAL MOUNTAIN RANGES, WITH THE POTENTIAL  
FOR SOME SNOW FOR PORTIONS OF THE HIGH PLAINS ALONG THE FRONT  
RANGE. THE COLD FRONT TO THE NORTH WILL ALSO PASS SOUTHWARD BY  
LATE FRIDAY AND INTO THE DAY SATURDAY, BRINGING RENEWED  
POST-FRONTAL UPSLOPE FLOW AND ADDITIONAL HEAVY SNOW FOR THE  
MOUNTAINS OF THE FRONT RANGE. THERE IS ALSO AN INCREASING  
POTENTIAL FOR ACCUMULATING SNOW SPREADING FURTHER EAST ACROSS THE  
RATON MESA ON FRIDAY AND ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN HIGH  
PLAINS ON SATURDAY.  
 
THE AMPLIFYING PATTERN WILL LEAD TO EXPANDING WELL ABOVE AVERAGE,  
WARM SPRING TEMPERATURES OVER PORTIONS OF THE EASTERN U.S. AS THE  
UPPER-LEVEL RIDGE BUILDS NORTHWARD, WHILE TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN  
MUCH COOLER AND BELOW AVERAGE UNDER THE UPPER-LEVEL TROUGH OVER  
MOST OF THE WESTERN/CENTRAL U.S. HIGHS THE NEXT COUPLE DAYS ACROSS  
THE SOUTHEASTERN QUADRANT OF THE U.S. ARE FORECAST TO BE IN THE  
80S TO LOW 90S, WITH NUMEROUS RECORD-TYING/BREAKING HIGHS  
POSSIBLE. FARTHER NORTH, THE MID-ATLANTIC/NORTHEAST SHOULD COOL TO  
THE 50S AND 60S FOR HIGHS ON FRIDAY, AND A COOL SURFACE HIGH WILL  
TAKE HOLD IN THE NORTHEAST SATURDAY FOR BELOW NORMAL HIGHS IN THE  
40S. MEANWHILE, FORECAST HIGHS ACROSS THE PLAINS INTO THE INTERIOR  
WEST WILL BE MOSTLY WELL BELOW AVERAGE. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL AREAS  
OF THE ROCKIES AND PLAINS SHOULD SEE HIGH TEMPERATURES IN THE 30S  
AND 40S ON FRIDAY, AND SOUTHERN ROCKIES/HIGH PLAINS CAN EXPECT  
HIGHS THAT ARE BELOW AVERAGE BY 20-25 DEGREES BY SATURDAY WITH  
ACTUAL HIGHS FALLING INTO THE 40S. THE WEST COAST CAN EXPECT  
WARMER, ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES COMPARED TO THE REST OF THE  
WEST AS A RIDGE BUILDS NORTHWARD OVER THE REGION, WITH HIGHS IN  
THE 60S AND 70S.  
 
TATE/PUTNAM  
 
GRAPHICS AVAILABLE AT  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/BASICWX/BASICWX_NDFD.PHP  

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab HPC Page Main Text Page