584  
FXUS02 KWNH 140701  
PREEPD  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD  
300 AM EDT MON JUL 14 2025  
 
VALID 12Z THU JUL 17 2025 - 12Z MON JUL 21 2025  
   
..CENTRAL GULF COAST HEAVY RAIN THREAT  
 
   
..OVERVIEW  
 
A FAIRLY TYPICAL SUMMERTIME PATTERN WILL REMAIN IN PLACE THROUGH  
MUCH OF THE MEDIUM RANGE PERIOD WITH AN EXPANSIVE AND BUILDING  
UPPER  
RIDGE STRETCHED ACROSS THE SOUTHERN U.S. AND PROGRESSIVE SHALLOW  
TROUGHS MOVING THROUGH THE NORTHERN STREAM FLOW. CONVECTION IS  
LIKELY ALONG AND AHEAD OF A COUPLE OF COLD FRONT THROUGH THE  
NORTHERN TIER AND INTO THE EAST. FARTHER SOUTH, A TROPICAL WAVE  
BEING MONITORED BY THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER FOR DEVELOPMENT IN  
THE NORTHERN GULF WILL BRING HEAVY RAIN THREATS TO PARTS OF FLORIDA  
AND ESPECIALLY PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST. MEANWHILE  
MONSOONAL MOISTURE INCREASES THROUGH THE PERIOD IN THE FOUR CORNERS  
STATES TO THE SOUTH- CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS. UPPER RIDGING FROM THE  
SOUTHERN PLAINS TO THE EAST WILL PROMOTE SUMMER HEAT THROUGH LATE  
WEEK INTO NEXT WEEKEND.  
 
   
..GUIDANCE/PREDICTABILITY ASSESSMENT  
 
MODEL GUIDANCE HAS PERSISTENTLY SHOWN AGREEMENT FOR A LOW  
AMPLITUDE AND PROGRESSIVE PATTERN, BUT WITH VARIABILITY IN THE  
DETAILS AND TIMING OF SHALLOW SHORTWAVE AND LONGWAVE TROUGHS WITHIN  
IT. THESE DETAILS AFFECT FRONTAL PLACEMENT AND QPF, BUT A GENERAL  
MODEL COMPROMISE WORKED WELL FOR THE FIRST PART OF THE PERIOD TO  
HANDLE THESE DIFFERENCES. A COUPLE OF SHORTWAVES ROUNDING A RIDGE  
OVER THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC SHOW MORE UNCERTAINTY, ESPECIALLY LATE  
PERIOD WITH MORE TROUGH AMPLIFICATION OVER THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST. A  
TREND TOWARDS HALF ENSEMBLE MEANS/HALF DETERMINISTIC WORKED WELL AS  
A STARTING POINT FOR DAYS 6 AND 7.  
 
THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER IS MONITORING A TROPICAL WAVE, WITH  
LOW PROBABILITY OF DEVELOPMENT, AS IT DRIFTS ACROSS NORTHERN  
FLORIDA INTO THE NORTHWEST GULF BY THE START OF THE MEDIUM RANGE  
PERIOD. THERE IS GOOD AGREMEENT ON THE PRESENCE OF A SURFACE  
REFLECTION, BUT A LOT OF UNCERTAINTY ON HOW STRONG THIS IS OR IF IT  
EVEN DEVELOPS INTO A FULL TROPICAL SYSTEM. THIS ESPECIALLY IMPACTS  
THE DISTRIBUTION AND AMOUNTS OF QPF. THE NBM IS HEAVIER THAN MUCH  
OF THE DETERMINISTIC GUIDANCE, WITH THE GFS AND ECMWF ON THE LOW  
END (AND LIKELY TOO LOW). THE WPC QPF TRENDED HEAVIER THAN  
CONTINUITY FOR THIS SYSTEM, BUT STILL LOWER THAN THE NBM AT THIS  
POINT.  
 
   
..WEATHER/HAZARDS HIGHLIGHTS  
 
A SURFACE LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM (WHICH THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER  
IS MONITORING WITH LOW PROBABILITIES OF TROPICAL CYCLONE  
DEVELOPMENT) WILL BE RETROGRADING INTO THE GULF BY MIDWEEK AFTER  
CROSSING FLORIDA, AND POTENTIALLY REACHING THE CENTRAL GULF COAST  
THURSDAY-FRIDAY. MOISTURE ABOVE THE 90TH PERCENTILE LOOKS TO REACH  
THE CENTRAL GULF COAST BY THE MEDIUM RANGE, AFTER A WET EARLY PART  
OF THE WEEK IN FLORIDA. GIVEN THE MOISTURE, AMPLE INSTABILITY, AND  
FORCING FROM WHATEVER SURFACE IS PRESENT, THIS WARRANTED AN UPGRADE  
TO SLIGHT RISK FROM PORTIONS OF LOUISIANA, AND FAR SOUTHERN  
MISSISSIPPI AND ALABAMA FOR BOTH DAY 4/THURSDAY AND DAY 5/FRIDAY. A  
MARGINAL RISK IS INCLUDED ON BOTH THE DAY 4/WEDNESDAY AND DAY  
5/THURSDAY EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OUTLOOK (ERO) FOR THOSE AREAS. HEAVY  
RAIN MAY LINGER IN THE GULF COAST REGION INTO NEXT WEEKEND AS WELL.  
 
MUCH OF THE NATION FROM THE ROCKIES EASTWARD WILL BE ACTIVE WITH  
TYPICAL SUMMERTIME CONVECTION IN A WARM AND UNSTABLE AIRMASS. A  
COLD FRONT SHIFTING INTO THE OHIO VALLEY/EAST THURSDAY AND FRIDAY  
WILL SUPPORT SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WITH AMPLE MOISTURE AND  
INSTABILITY, RESULTING IN A HEAVY TO EXCESSIVE RAINFALL THREAT.  
BOTH THE THURSDAY AND FRIDAY ERO SHOWS A VERY BROAD MARGINAL RISK  
ACROSS THESE REGIONS AND STRETCHING BACK WESTWARD INTO THE MIDDLE  
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS WHERE THE POTENTIAL  
FOR WEST-  
EAST TRAINING OF CONVECTION MAY BE HIGHER. THERE IS CONSIDERABLE  
SPREAD WITH THE MODEL GUIDANCE REGARDING HEAVY RAIN AMOUNTS AND  
PLACEMENT, SO THE MARGINALS ARE QUITE BROAD IN ORDER TO COVER THE  
WIDESPREAD THREAT. GENERALLY THIS IS A LOW- END AND ISOLATED FLASH  
FLOODING THREAT EQUATING TO A MARGINAL RISK, BUT SOME AREAS MAY  
EVENTUALLY NEED EMBEDDED SLIGHT RISKS IN FUTURE CYCLES IF MODELS  
CONVERGE. ANOTHER FRONT TO THE WEST WILL SUPPORT RENEWED RAINFALL  
THREATS AROSS THE NORTHERN PLAINS/UPPER MIDWEST NEXT WEEKEND.  
 
FARTHER SOUTH, MONSOONAL MOISTURE WILL GRADUALLY INCREASE IN  
COVERAGE ACROSS THE SOUTHWEST/FOUR CORNERS/SOUTHERN ROCKIES REGION.  
MARGINAL RISKS ARE IN PLACE ACROSS MUCH OF ARIZONA AND NEW MEXICO  
AND STRETCHING INTO COLORADO FOR BOTH THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. AREAS  
LIKE BURN SCARS AND URBAN AREAS WOULD BE OF GREATEST CONCERN FOR  
FLASH FLOODING. THE MONSOON PATTERN SHOULD CONTINUE INTO NEXT  
WEEKEND.  
 
TEMPERATURES IN THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS WILL COOL DRAMATICALLY BY  
WEDNESDAY WITH HIGHS AROUND 15 TO 25 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL.  
TEMPERATURES THERE SHOULD SLOWLY WARM CLOSER TO AVERAGE LATE WEEK.  
TEMPERATURES LOOK TO BE A FEW DEGREES COOLER THAN AVERAGE FOR THE  
SOUTH-CENTRAL U.S. FOR MUCH OF THE WEEK AS CLOUDS AND RAIN HOLD  
TEMPERATURES DOWN. THE GREAT LAKES AND NORTHEAST WILL SEE WARMER  
THAN AVERAGE TEMPERATURES WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY UNDER AN UPPER  
RIDGE, WITH SOMEWHAT WIDESPREAD MAJOR (LEVEL 3/4) HEATRISK SHOWING  
UP IN THOSE AREAS AND POINTS SOUTHWARD MID-LATE WEEK. IN THE  
NORTHEAST, A COLD FRONT WILL ALLOW TEMPERATURES TO COOL TOWARD  
NORMAL BY NEXT WEKEEND. MEANWHILE THE SOUTHEAST SHOULD BE NEAR  
NORMAL MOST DAYS, FOR TYPICAL SUMMER HEAT AND HUMIDITY.  
 
SANTORELLI  
 
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