401  
FXUS02 KWBC 221843  
PMDEPD  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD  
243 PM EDT SUN JUN 22 2025  
 
VALID 12Z WED JUN 25 2025 - 12Z SUN JUN 29 2025  
 
...RECORD HEAT GRADUALLY LESSENS BUT DANGEROUS HEAT CONTINUES FOR  
THE OHIO/TENNESSEE VALLEYS AND MID-ATLANTIC/SOUTHEAST MID TO LATE  
WEEK...  
 
...HEAVY RAIN AND FLASH FLOODING CONCERNS CONTINUE FOR THE NORTH-  
CENTRAL PLAINS/UPPER MIDWEST WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, AND LINGERING  
IN NEW MEXICO WEDNESDAY...  
 
   
..OVERVIEW  
 
AS THE MEDIUM RANGE PERIOD BEGINS WEDNESDAY, A SIGNIFICANT AND  
EXTREMELY DANGEROUS HEAT WAVE WILL BE ONGOING ACROSS THE MIDWEST,  
OHIO VALLEY, AND EASTERN U.S. AS A NOTABLY STRONG UPPER HIGH IS  
CENTERED FROM THE OHIO/TENNESSEE VALLEYS INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC. THE  
EXTREME, RECORD-BREAKING HEAT SHOULD MODERATE SLOWLY MIDWEEK AND  
BEYOND, BUT TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN QUITE HOT ACROSS THOSE AREAS,  
AND THE LONG DURATION OF THE HEAT WAVE COULD CAUSE EXACERBATED  
IMPACTS. MEANWHILE STRONG SOUTHERLY INFLOW WITH DEEP TROPICAL  
MOISTURE WILL SET UP BETWEEN THE UPPER HIGH AND AN INITIAL MEAN  
TROUGH WITH EMBEDDED SHORTWAVES IN THE WEST. MOISTURE WILL  
INITIALLY REACH NEW MEXICO AND LEAD TO ADDITIONAL HEAVY RAIN THERE  
(EXTENDING FROM THE SHORT RANGE INTO THE MEDIUM RANGE), WITH THE  
MOISTURE THEN REACHING AROUND THE UPPER RIDGE (IN A "RING OF FIRE"  
SETUP). THIS SHOULD INTERACT WITH A WAVY FRONTAL BOUNDARY AND  
PROMOTE ANOTHER AREA OF POTENTIALLY HEAVY RAIN AND FLASH FLOODING  
OVER THE NORTH-CENTRAL PLAINS, CORN BELT/MIDWEST, AND GREAT  
LAKES/NORTHEAST REGION.  
 
   
..GUIDANCE/PREDICTABILITY ASSESSMENT  
 
THE LARGE SCALE PATTERN REMAINS IN EXCELLENT AGREEMENT FOR  
MIDWEEK, AS MODELS FOR SEVERAL DAYS HAVE SHOWN A 594+ DM UPPER  
RIDGE LASTING THROUGH WEDNESDAY, AND WEAKENING AND FLATTENING AFTER  
THAT. MEANWHILE FARTHER WEST, TROUGHING ACROSS THE GREAT BASIN AND  
VICINITY WILL ALSO WEAKEN AS THE WEEK PROGRESSES. THIS, COMBINED  
WITH A WAVE TRAIN OF NORTHERN STREAM SHORTWAVES, WILL TREND THE 500  
MB FLOW PATTERN TOWARD MORE ZONAL AND LESS AMPLIFIED FLOW FOR THE  
LATTER HALF OF THE 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 MID TO LATE  
MEDIUM RANGE PERIOD, BUT NOTHING OUT OF THE ORDINARY AT THAT TIME  
RANGE. SOMEWHAT BROADER SCALE TROUGHING MOVING INTO THE NORTHWEST  
LATE WEEK AND PROGRESSING EASTWARD INTO THE WEEKEND SHOWS SOME  
TIMING AND AMPLITUDE DIFFERENCES. THE 06Z GFS WAS A BIT OFFSET FROM  
THE LARGER CLUSTER OF SOLUTIONS AROUND THE 00Z ECMWF WITH  
SHORTWAVES OUT OF THE NORTHEASTERN PACIFIC, SO IT WAS EXCLUDED FROM  
THE BLEND BY NEXT WEEKEND.  
 
THE WPC FORECAST FOR MASS FIELDS WAS BASED ON A GENERAL MULTI-  
MODEL BLEND EARLY IN THE PERIOD BEFORE SUNSETTING THE GFS IN FAVOR  
OF THE ENSEMBLE MEANS AND CONTINUITY. THE NBM WAS SUFFICIENT FOR  
MOST SENSIBLE WEATHER GRIDS. FOR QPF, MAIN CHALLENGE WAS WITH THE  
PLACEMENT AND DOWNSTREAM EXTENSION OF HEAVIER RAINFALL FROM NE/IA  
UP AND OVER THE RIDGE INTO THE GREAT LAKES AND POSSIBLE  
NORTHEAST/MID-ATLANTIC. THIS WAS ENCAPSULATED WITHIN THE EXCESSIVE  
RAINFALL OUTLOOKS FOR DAYS 4-5.  
 
   
..WEATHER/HAZARDS HIGHLIGHTS  
 
ON WEDNESDAY, THE UPPER TROUGH IN THE INTERIOR WEST WILL BE  
GRADUALLY WEAKENING, LESSENING UPPER JET RIGHT ENTRANCE REGION  
SUPPORT AND SLIGHTLY LESSENING MOISTURE ANOMALIES IN THE SOUTHERN  
ROCKIES/HIGH PLAINS COMPARED TO WHAT'S NOW THE SHORT RANGE PERIOD.  
HOWEVER, SOME HEAVY RAIN COULD STILL BE A CONCERN CENTERED AROUND  
NEW MEXICO, ESPECIALLY CONSIDERING THE WET ANTECEDENT CONDITIONS BY  
THEN. A SLIGHT RISK IS DELINEATED IN THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS AND  
VICINITY FOR THE DAY 4/WEDNESDAY ERO, WHERE OROGRAPHIC SUPPORT  
COULD ENHANCE RAINFALL TOTALS AND WHERE BURN SCARS AND STEEP  
TERRAIN MAKE THE AREA SENSITIVE TO HEAVY RAIN. RAIN AMOUNTS SHOULD  
CONTINUE TO GRADUALLY DECREASE THERE INTO LATER WEEK. MAINTAINED A  
MARGINAL RISK ON DAY 5/THURSDAY FOR SOUTHERN PORTIONS OF NEW MEXICO  
INCLUDING THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS FOR ANOTHER POTENTIAL ROUND OF  
MODERATE TO LOCALLY HEAVY RAIN.  
 
THE PLUME OF SUBTROPICAL/TROPICAL MOISTURE WILL ARC NORTHEASTWARD  
INTO THE NORTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST/CORN BELT WHERE THE  
ADDITIONAL LIFT AROUND THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY AND POTENTIAL TRAINING  
WILL FAVOR AREAS OF HEAVIER RAINFALL AND SOME FLASH FLOODING  
POTENTIAL. FOR THE DAY 4/WEDNESDAY ERO, CONTINUE TO SHOW A SLIGHT  
RISK (WITH EMBEDDED PROBABILITIES ON THE HIGHER END OF THE SLIGHT  
RANGE) FOR THESE AREAS. THE SLIGHT GENERALLY COVERS SOME MODEL  
SPREAD FROM AN EASTERN NEBRASKA/NORTHWESTERN IOWA FOCUS TO AREAS  
FARTHER NORTHEAST (SOUTHERN MN TO NORTHERN/CENTRAL WI). THE DETAILS  
IN THE HEAVY RAINFALL PLACEMENT REMAIN UNCERTAIN DUE TO THE  
SENSITIVITY OF DAY-TO-DAY RAINFALL PATTERNS AND MESOSCALE  
BOUNDARIES. A WEAK SURFACE LOW EMBEDDED ALONG THE FRONT MAY TRACK  
SOMEWHAT EAST BY THURSDAY, PUSHING THE HEAVIEST RAIN TOTALS ACROSS  
MUCH OF WISCONSIN AND POSSIBLY THE U.P. OF MICHIGAN. THUS FOR THE  
INITIAL DAY 5/THURSDAY ERO, WILL SHOW A SLIGHT RISK THERE, GIVEN  
POTENTIAL FOR 2 TO 4 INCHES TO ACCUMULATE DESPITE CONTINUED SPREAD  
IN THE EXACT POSITIONING. NUDGED THE FOCUS AREA SOUTHWARD A BIT DUE  
TO A SHIFT SOUTHWARD WITH THE FRONTAL PLACEMENT. FOR BOTH  
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, SOME CONVECTION WITH LOCALLY HEAVY RAIN  
COULD TRAVERSE THE NORTHERN SIDE OF THE RIDGE FARTHER EAST INTO NEW  
YORK STATE AND THE NORTHERN MID- ATLANTIC, AND HAVE CAPTURED THESE  
AREAS WITHIN THE MARGINAL RISK AS WELL. THE NORTHEAST MAY SEE  
INCREASING RAIN AMOUNTS BY FRIDAY, WHILE ANOTHER ROUND OF RAIN IS  
POSSIBLE IN THE NORTH- CENTRAL U.S. LATE 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. FOR NOW, WILL LEAVE THIS AREA OUT OF ANY MARGINAL RISK IN  
THE ERO.  
 
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  
EARLY IN THE WEEK (SHORT RANGE) BUT FEWER BY WEDNESDAY. RECORD WARM  
MORNING LOWS ARE POSSIBLE IF THOSE NUMBERS HOLD THROUGH THE  
CALENDAR DAY. THIS TRANSLATES INTO HIGHS WELL INTO THE 90S INTO THE  
LOW 100S, 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, AND EVEN MAY STAY AROUND 80-83F IN THE  
URBAN CENTERS LIKE WASHINGTON, D.C., BALTIMORE, PHILADELPHIA, AND  
NEW YORK CITY WEDNESDAY MORNING. THIS WILL BRING LITTLE RELIEF FROM  
THE HEAT AND EXACERBATE POTENTIAL IMPACTS. THUS, HEATRISK VALUES  
WILL BE MAJOR TO EXTREME FOR PORTIONS 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. EXTREME HEAT IS THE NUMBER 1 WEATHER-RELATED KILLER --  
PLEASE TAKE PRECAUTIONS IF YOU ARE OUTSIDE DURING THE HOTTEST PART  
OF THE DAY AND SEEK COOLING IF YOU ARE WITHOUT ADEQUATE MEANS.  
TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN ABOVE AVERAGE, THOUGH A FEW DEGREES LOWER  
AND WITH FEWER RECORDS POSSIBLE, ACROSS MUCH OF THE OHIO  
VALLEY/MID- ATLANTIC/SOUTHEAST INTO THE LATTER PART OF NEXT WEEK.  
BUT THE NORTHEAST SHOULD SEE MODERATING TEMPERATURES AFTER A COLD  
FRONTAL PASSAGE. MEANWHILE, TEMPERATURES (PARTICULARLY HIGHS) ARE  
FORECAST TO BE BELOW AVERAGE BY A FEW DEGREES IN THE HIGH PLAINS  
INTO MIDWEEK, BUT THE WEST SHOULD GRADUALLY WARM TO A BIT ABOVE  
AVERAGE AS THE WEEK PROGRESSES.  
 
FRACASSO/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