822  
FXUS02 KWBC 201757  
PMDEPD  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD  
157 PM EDT FRI JUN 20 2025  
 
VALID 12Z MON JUN 23 2025 - 12Z FRI JUN 27 2025  
 
...SIGNIFICANT AND EXTREMELY DANGEROUS HEAT WAVE CONTINUES ACROSS  
THE MIDWEST AND MID-ATLANTIC/NORTHEAST NEXT WEEK...  
 
...MULTI-DAY HEAVY RAIN THREAT WITH POTENTIAL FOR FLASH FLOODING  
ACROSS THE NORTH-CENTRAL PLAINS/UPPER MIDWEST AS WELL AS THE  
SOUTHERN ROCKIES/HIGH PLAINS NEXT WEEK...  
 
   
..OVERVIEW
 
 
A NOTABLY STRONG UPPER HIGH WILL BE CENTERED OVER THE OHIO AND  
TENNESSEE VALLEYS INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC NEXT WEEK, CONTINUING A  
SIGNIFICANT AND EXTREMELY DANGEROUS HEAT WAVE ACROSS MUCH OF THE  
EASTERN HALF OF THE LOWER 48. MEANWHILE STRONG SOUTHERLY INFLOW  
WITH DEEP TROPICAL MOISTURE WILL SET UP BETWEEN THE UPPER HIGH AND  
A MEAN TROUGH WITH EMBEDDED SHORTWAVES IN THE WEST. THIS SHOULD  
LEAD TO MULTIPLE DAYS OF POTENTIALLY HEAVY RAIN FOCUSED AROUND NEW  
MEXICO, WITH THE MOISTURE THEN REACHING AROUND THE UPPER RIDGE (IN  
A "RING OF FIRE" SETUP) AND FLOWING INTO A FRONTAL BOUNDARY FOR  
HEAVY RAIN POTENTIAL IN THE NORTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST.  
 
   
..GUIDANCE/PREDICTABILITY ASSESSMENT
 
 
MODEL GUIDANCE REMAINS IN EXCELLENT AGREEMENT WITH THE LARGE SCALE  
PATTERN NEXT WEEK, ESPECIALLY THROUGH DAY 5. A LARGE AND EXPANSIVE  
594+ DM UPPER RIDGE IS PROGGED TO DOMINATE ACROSS MUCH OF THE  
EASTERN HALF OF THE CONUS THROUGH MIDWEEK BEFORE SLOWLY  
FLATTENING/WEAKENING HEADING INTO NEXT WEEKEND. THIS WEAKENING OF  
THE RIDGE COMBINED WITH A FAIRLY ENERGETIC PACIFIC NORTHERN STREAM  
WAVE TRAIN WILL ACT TO TREND THE 500 MB FLOW PATTERN MORE ZONAL AND  
LESS AMPLIFIED FOR THE LATTER HALF OF NEXT WEEK. THE SLIGHT  
DIFFERENCES IN SPEED AND AMPLITUDE OF MULTIPLE SHORTWAVES STREAMING  
FROM THE WEST TO THE UPPER MIDWEST INTRODUCES A BIT MORE  
UNCERTAINTY FOR THE END OF THE MEDIUM RANGE PERIOD, BUT NOTHING OUT  
OF THE ORDINARY AT THAT TIME RANGE.  
 
THE LATEST WPC FORECAST WAS FORMULATED USING A COMPOSITE BLEND OF  
MAINLY DETERMINISTIC GUIDANCE (FAVORING THE 00Z EC AND 00Z/06Z GFS)  
THROUGH DAY 5 BEFORE INTRODUCING AND INCREASING THE PROPORTION OF  
GEFS AND EC ENSEMBLE MEANS FOR DAYS 6 AND 7. THIS BLEND SEEMED TO  
MATCH UP RELATIVELY WELL WITH THE LATEST MACHINE LEARNING GUIDANCE,  
PARTICULARLY THE EC AIFS. THE 50/50 BLEND OF DETERMINISTIC AND  
ENSEMBLE MEANS LATE IN THE PERIOD OFFERED A REASONABLE MIDDLE  
GROUND SOLUTION THAT FAVORED STABILITY, CONTINUITY, AND SMOOTHED  
OUT THE SMALL SHORTWAVE DIFFERENCES WHICH COULD IMPACT THE  
PLACEMENT AND POSITIONING OF FRONTAL FEATURES, PRESSURES, AND QPF.  
 
   
..WEATHER/HAZARDS HIGHLIGHTS
 
 
THE UPPER TROUGH/RIDGE PATTERN SETTING UP ACROSS THE LOWER 48 WILL  
DRAW IN AMPLE SUBTROPICAL MOISTURE TO THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES/HIGH  
PLAINS. THE RIGHT ENTRANCE REGION OF THE UPPER JET WILL PROVIDE  
SUPPORT TO DEVELOP AND MAINTAIN RAIN AND THUNDERSTORMS, WHILE  
MOISTURE LEVELS SHOULD BE HIGH. SPECIFICALLY, PRECIPITABLE WATER  
VALUES ARE LIKELY TO BE OVER THE 95TH PERCENTILE IF NOT 99TH, WHILE  
INSTABILITY WILL BE SUFFICIENT FOR WIDESPREAD THUNDERSTORMS. NEW  
MEXICO IS LIKELY TO SEE THE HEAVIEST RAIN, AND HAVE DELINEATED  
SLIGHT RISKS IN THE DAY 4/MONDAY AND DAY 5/TUESDAY EROS FOR  
POTENTIAL FLASH FLOODING. BY DAY 5/TUESDAY THIS IS CONSIDERED A  
HIGHER-END SLIGHT RISK GIVEN SLIGHTLY BETTER MOISTURE PARAMETERS  
AND WETTER ANTECEDENT CONDITIONS BY THEN. AREAS LIKE TERRAIN AND  
BURN SCARS (PARTICULARLY THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS) WOULD BE  
PARTICULARLY SENSITIVE. SOME MOIST INFLOW IS LIKELY TO CONTINUE  
WEDNESDAY AND BEYOND, CONTINUING RAIN CHANCES, THOUGH THE UPPER JET  
SHOULD GET GRADUALLY WEAKER FOR LESS SUPPORT FOR HEAVY AMOUNTS.  
 
MOISTURE IS FORECAST TO WRAP AROUND ON THE NORTHERN SIDE OF THE  
UPPER RIDGE AND SPREAD RAIN CHANCES EASTWARD INTO THE NORTH-CENTRAL  
PLAINS AND MIDWEST IN CONJUNCTION WITH SHORTWAVES. A MEANDERING  
FRONTAL BOUNDARY WILL FOCUS THIS MOISTURE ON THE CUSP OF THE  
INSTABILITY GRADIENT AND LEAD TO THUNDERSTORMS WITH POTENTIALLY  
HEAVY RAIN RATES THAT COULD TRAIN WEST TO EAST. INCREASING QPF  
TRENDS GAVE CONFIDENCE TO EXPAND THE SPATIAL FOOTPRINTS OF THE  
SLIGHT RISKS ON DAYS 4 AND 5. ADDITIONALLY, AN AREA INCLUDING PARTS  
OF SOUTHEAST NEBRASKA AND SOUTHWEST IOWA CAN BE CONSIDERED A  
HIGHER END SLIGHT RISK ON DAY 4. FOR DAY 5, A LARGE PORTION OF  
NEBRASKA AND PARTS OF NORTHWEST IOWA, SOUTHEAST SOUTH DAKOTA AND  
EXTREME SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA WITHIN THE BROADER SLIGHT RISK CAN ALSO  
NOW BE CONSIDERED HIGHER END GIVEN HEAVIER QPF TRENDS. OTHERWISE,  
ANOTHER RATHER WET DAY IS CURRENTLY FORECAST FOR THE UPPER MIDWEST  
WEDNESDAY WITH SOME EASTWARD SHIFT TOWARD THE UPPER GREAT LAKES  
REGION POSSIBLE BY THURSDAY. SOME RAIN AND STORMS COULD SPREAD INTO  
THE MID-ATLANTIC AND NORTHEAST MID TO LATER WEEK AS WELL.  
 
FARTHER SOUTH, THERE IS SOME UNCERTAINTY WITH HOW MUCH CONVECTION  
MAY OCCUR UNDER THE UPPER RIDGE ACROSS THE GULF COAST AND  
SOUTHEASTERN U.S. AS SURFACE BASED INSTABILITY LIKELY BATTLES WITH  
SUBSIDENCE ALOFT. IN GENERAL, SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS MAY INCREASE  
IN COVERAGE AS THE WEEK PROGRESSES AS THE UPPER HIGH GRADUALLY  
WEAKENS. THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS MAY BE A PARTICULAR FOCUS FOR  
CONVECTION WITH OROGRAPHIC LIFT.  
 
THE STRONG UPPER HIGH/RIDGE STRETCHING ACROSS THE SOUTH-CENTRAL TO  
EASTERN U.S. WILL ALLOW FOR WELL ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES THAT  
COULD APPROACH OR EXCEED DAILY RECORDS AT A FEW DOZEN LOCATIONS  
PEAKING MONDAY AND TUESDAY. THIS TRANSLATES INTO HIGHS WELL INTO  
THE 90S TO AROUND 100F WITH HEAT INDICES TO NEAR 110F AS DEW POINTS  
WILL BE IN THE 60S TO LOW/MID-70S. OVERNIGHT LOWS WILL ONLY DROP  
INTO THE LOW/MID 70S FOR MANY AREAS BUT MAY STAY AROUND 80F IN THE  
URBAN CENTERS LIKE WASHINGTON, D.C., BALTIMORE, PHILADELPHIA, AND  
NEW YORK CITY. HEATRISK VALUES WILL BE MAJOR TO EXTREME FOR MUCH OF  
THE MIDWEST AND OHIO VALLEY TO EASTERN STATES -- LEVELS 3 AND 4 ON  
A SCALE FROM 1 TO 4 (4 BEING EXTREME). THIS INDICATES AN INTENSITY  
AND DURATION OF HEAT THAT IS EXTREMELY DANGEROUS TO ANYONE WITHOUT  
ADEQUATE COOLING OR HYDRATION. SUCCESSIVE OVERNIGHT READINGS IN  
THE MID 70S TO AROUND 80F WILL BRING LITTLE RELIEF FROM THE HEAT  
AND CAN POSE A SIGNIFICANT DANGER. EXTREME HEAT IS THE NUMBER 1  
WEATHER-RELATED KILLER. TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED TO MODERATE BY A  
FEW DEGREES BUT REMAIN ABOVE AVERAGE INTO THE LATTER PART OF NEXT  
WEEK. MEANWHILE, TEMPERATURES (PARTICULARLY HIGHS) ARE FORECAST TO  
BE BELOW AVERAGE BY 5-15 DEGREES IN INTERIOR PORTIONS OF THE WEST  
EARLY NEXT WEEK, BUT SHOULD GRADUALLY WARM CLOSER TO OR A BIT ABOVE  
AVERAGE AS THE WEEK PROGRESSES.  
 
MILLER/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