752  
FXUS02 KWBC 170640  
PMDEPD  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD  
240 AM EDT FRI APR 17 2026  
 
VALID 12Z MON APR 20 2026 - 12Z FRI APR 24 2026  
   
..OVERVIEW  
 
A FAIRLY ACTIVE WEATHER PATTERN IS EXPECTED AS A UPPPER-LEVEL LOW  
AND TROUGH OVER WESTERN U.S. WILL SUPPORT CYCLOGENESIS BRINGING  
CHANCES FOR SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS, AS WELL AS MOUNTAIN SNOW,  
OVER PORTIONS OF WESTERN U.S. INTO NORTHERN AND CENTRAL  
ROCKIES/PLAIN BY MID-WEEK. CHANCES FOR ACTIVE WEATHER PUSHES  
EASTWARD INTO OHIO VALLEY/GREAT LAKES AND MID-ATLANTIC TOWARDS LATE  
WEEK. COOLER TEMPERATURES FOR MUCH OF EASTERN U.S. FOR THE START OF  
WEEK, UNTIL ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES OVER CENTRAL AND PARTS OF  
WESTERN U.S. PUSHES EASTWARD BY MIDWEEK.  
 
   
..GUIDANCE/PREDICTABILITY ASSESSMENT  
 
MODELS SHOW DECENT AGREEMENT ON LARGE SCALE FEATURES OF THE RIDGE  
OVER CENTRAL U.S., TROUGHING OVER EASTERN U.S., AND THE CLOSED LOW  
POSITIONED OFF THE WEST COAST. THE UNCERTAINTY COMES IN TOWARDS  
TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY, WHERE MODELS DIVERGE SPECIFICALLY FOR THE  
SYSTEM OFF THE WEST COAST. THE GFS CONTINUES TO SHOW A SLOWER  
PROGRESSION, WHILE THE CMC/ECMWF/UKMET PUSHES THE SYSTEM CLOSER  
INLAND BY LATE TUESDAY INTO EARLY WEDNESDAY. RUN-TO-RUN VARIABILITY  
INCREASING WITH THE GFS AS WELL. THEREFORE, THE FORECAST WAS BASED  
ON A EVEN MULT-MODEL BLEND FOR THE FIRST PORTION OF THE PERIOD, THEN  
GRADUALLY PHASING IN THE ENSEMBLE MEANS AND LOWERING THE GFS  
WEIGHT A BIT, TO BE ABLE TO ACCOUNT FOR SOME OF THE TIMING  
DIFFERENCES.  
 
   
..WEATHER/HAZARDS HIGHLIGHTS  
 
INCREASING RETURN FLOW FROM THE GULF WILL SUPPORT A BROAD AXIS OF  
MOISTURE CONVERGENCE AND INSTABILITY ALONG THE FRONTAL SYSTEM OVER  
THE GULF. THIS WILL FAVOR ORGANIZED CONVECTION AND POTENTIAL HEAVY  
RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS ON MONDAY AND GRADUALLY  
EXPANDING INTO THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND OHIO VALLEY BY WEDNESDAY.  
LATE WEDNESDAY INTO THURSDAY, THE LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM OVER THE HIGH  
PLAINS WILL CONTINUE TO SHIFT EASTWARD, BRINGING CHANCES FOR RAIN  
AND THUNDERSTORMS WELL ACROSS THE PLAINS INTO THE OHIO VALLEY, MID-  
ATLANTIC, AND PARTS THE GREAT LAKES. THE POSSIBILITY FOR LOCALIZED  
AREAS OF FLASH FLOODING CONTINUES AS THE LINGERING FRONTAL BOUNDARY  
NEAR TEXAS MAY PRODUCE TRAINING STORMS AND REPEATED CONVECTION ALONG  
THE BOUNDARY. THEREFORE, THE MARGINAL RISK FOR DAY 4 WILL CONTINUE  
FOR PARTS OF SOUTH TEXAS.  
 
MEANWHILE, ANOTHER SYSTEM WILL MOVE INLAND FROM THE EASTERN PACIFIC  
BY MONDAY, BRINGING CHANCES FOR RAIN AND THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MUCH  
OF THE WEST COAST. OVER HIGHER ELEVATIONS, EXPECT CHANCES FOR LIGHT  
TO MODERATE SNOW. WITH THE SYSTEM EXPECTED TO BRING 1-2 INCHES OF  
RAINFALL ON MONDAY AND THE RISK OF RUNOFFS AND BURN-SCARS, THE  
MARGINAL RISK OVER PARTS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA HAVE BEEN  
MAINTAINED. SIMILARLY, FOR DAY 5, A MARGINAL RISK HAS BEEN PLACED AS  
AN ADDITIONAL 1-2 INCHES IS EXPECTED FOR TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY AND  
SOIL MOISTURE WILL LIKELY BE SATURATED FROM RECENT RAINFALL. AS THE  
COLD FRONT MOVES EASTWARD, CHANCES FOR ACCUMULATING SNOW IS LIKELY  
ACROSS PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND NORTHERN ROCKIES FROM TUESDAY AND  
EXPANDS INTO THE NORTHERN PLAINS BY THURSDAY. WHILE IMPACTS SHOULD  
BE MAINLY CONFINED TO HIGHER ELEVATIONS, SOME TRAVEL IMPACTS MAY BE  
POSSIBLE.  
 
TEMPERATURES WILL TREND BELOW AVERAGE ON MONDAY OVER MUCH OF EASTERN  
U.S. AND TEXAS AS THE COLD FRONT CONTINUES TO DEPART OFF THE COAST,  
AND HIGH PRESSURE BEGINS TO BUILD. MAX TEMPERATURES WILL BE IN THE  
60S OVER TEXAS AND DIPPING INTO THE LOW 40S ACROSS PARTS OF THE  
NORTHEAST. FROST/FREEZE CONCERNS WILL OCCUR FOR MONDAY NIGHT FOR  
PARTS OF THE NORTHEAST. OVER MUCH OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN U.S. ABOVE  
NORMAL TEMPERATURES WILL BUILD AHEAD OF THE FRONTAL SYSTEM, WITH THE  
ROCKIES/PLAINS SEEING 15-20 DEGREES ABOVE AVERAGE. TOWARDS MID-WEEK,  
WARMER TEMPERATURES WILL SPREAD ACROSS TO THE EAST COAST, WHILE  
BEHIND THE FRONTAL SYSTEM, TEMPERATURES RETURN TO BELOW NORMAL  
ACROSS PARTS OF WESTERN U.S.  
 
OUDIT  
 
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, EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OUTLOOK, WINTER WEATHER OUTLOOK PROBABILITIES, HEAT INDICES AND KEY MESSAGES ARE AT:  
 
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