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G Pitts Lake Missouri Weather Forecast Discussion

243
FXUS63 KEAX 152016
AFDEAX

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Kansas City/Pleasant Hill MO 316 PM CDT Wed Oct 15 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

* Well above normal temperatures in the upper 70s to mid 80s continue through Friday - At this point in the season, to around 15 deg above normal

* Next chance for thunderstorms arrives Friday into Friday night and may continue into Saturday - A few strong to isolated severe storms will be possible - Main Threats: Strong to damaging winds and small hail - Where: Primarily eastern KS and western MO

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.DISCUSSION... Issued at 314 PM CDT Wed Oct 15 2025

The general trend for today has been for clearing skies across Central Missouri to partly cloudy skies northward to the Iowa border. And rather than being on the dry side across the forecast area, low-mid level isentropic lift has continued to drive scattered weak showers around/atop the larger mid level ridge. Nothing of real consequence other than periodic light rain (a couple/few hundredths of an inch) interspersed with bits of sunshine. This weak activity will continue to stream across northern Missouri and southern Iowa into this evening. There should be a break in this low-mid level activity overnight, before one more lobe/wave of low-mid level moisture and isentropic lift wraps into and across Northern Missouri, again based/centered around 700mb, through the morning hours Thursday. Once again, just scattered light rain to sprinkles anticipated. Much drier air begins to move in by the late morning and afternoon Thursday, putting an end to precipitation activity and further clearing skies across the wider area. Temperatures will continue to be well above normal in the low to mid 80s, equating to around 15 degrees above normal. Concurrently, existing large Western CONUS mid-upper level cutoff low/trough will drift across the Intermountain West and amplify mid-upper ridging over the area, further bolstering drying and clearing conditions.

Large scale pattern becomes more active Friday into the weekend as the Western CONUS trough drifts NE and into the Northern Plains. Lee Cyclogenesis/surface low development will push a cold frontal boundary across the Central Plains, approaching the area Friday afternoon/evening. Synoptic guidance remains in fair agreement with general arrival timing, but have begun to waffle on how quickly the front moves across the area. Regardless, initial expectations remain the same for scattered to widespread showers/storms. MUCAPE remains on the weaker side, ~500 J/kg and greater just to the SW of the area, concurrent with 0-6km shear values to around 40kts. It is possible a stronger storm is able to be realized, esp if higher MUCAPE values are realized, but continued weak depictions of profile lapse rates and more parallel to boundary shear vectors tend to tamp down risk. So... the SPC Marginal Risk on Day 3 (Friday/Friday night) appears reasonable. Main threat would be strong to damaging winds. Some periods of heavy rain likely pushes a few areas >1" of rainfall, but at least initially progress front and antecedent dry conditions limits flooding potential. The guidance waffling on the frontal progression plays a larger role into where Saturday activity will be and to what degree. Currently SPC carries an Day 4 15% risk across much of Southern Missouri and further into the Lower Mississippi Valley. Should the front struggle move south, that risk area may ultimately reside further north into Central Missouri, esp as moist southerly flow continues. At the moment, continued moisture advection and marginally better lapse rates suggest MUCAPE values into the 1000- 1500 J/kg will be possible with similar aforementioned 0-6km shear magnitudes. Again, shear vectors appear mostly parallel to the front as well, tamping down some strong/severe risk. Winds would be the primary risk, especially with congealed or linear segments that can orient more favorably. Isolated warm sector convection may carry an all modes risk as well, but a fair amount of uncertainty in potential frontal position as well as storm mode and evolution. Suffice it to say, storms move through Friday/Friday night with hopefully beneficial rain amounts and `possibly` Saturday if frontal timing slows as some runs have suggested.

By Sunday and into next week, tendency is to dry out, but a quick moving mid-upper shortwave trough moves out of British Columbia/PNW and into the Central/Northern Plains. Limited moisture with it, but strong enough lift for persistent depictions of a few showers to be associated with its passage Saturday evening/overnight. Prevailing track keeps majority of this activity into Nebraska/Iowa, but may clip portions of Northern Missouri before it pivots eastward. Dry air the dominates the area Sunday into early next week as surface high influence slides in. This also allows temperatures to dive back towards and just below seasonal normals, into the low to mid 60s Sunday. Eastward departure of surface high returns southerly flow and pushes highs back toward or a few degrees above normal in the upper 60s to mid 70s to begin next week.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z THURSDAY/... Issued at 1222 PM CDT Wed Oct 15 2025

VFR conditions expected to prevail across the TAF sites. Primarily mid-upper level cloud cover (>10kft) to begin the period and then return toward latter portions. Not out of the question for another widely scattered light shower late in the period, similar to this morning, but confidence is too low to make any mentions. Otherwise, southerly winds around 10kts this afternoon, easy out of the SE overnight, then picking back up out of the south tomorrow around/after 15z with gusts to around 20kts.

&&

.EAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...None. KS...None.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Curtis AVIATION...Curtis

NWS EAX Office Area Forecast Discussion

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