


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Kansas City/Pleasant Hill, MO
Issued by NWS Kansas City/Pleasant Hill, MO
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007 FXUS63 KEAX 021901 AFDEAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Kansas City/Pleasant Hill MO 201 PM CDT Sat Aug 2 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Smoke/haze from the Canadian wildfires will continue through Sunday; however, overall effects on air quality and visibility are expected to diminish gradually. - Below-seasonal temperatures will continue through Monday, but temperatures will warm to near/above seasonal averages by the end of next week. - Conditions will be mostly dry through the work week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 134 PM CDT Sat Aug 2 2025 Another hazy day across the area as smoke from the Canadian wildfires continues to seep into much of the northern and central U.S. Given the rather nebulous upper flow in much of the U.S. and a favorable northwesterly fetch in the central/eastern portion of the country, it may take some time for the smoke/haze to diminish. Conditions are certainly better today, given satellite and air-quality observations, but upstream observations suggest that the smoke will probably stick around for at least another 24 hours. Though the effects of the smoke are expected to continue to dwindle, we should continue to see a somewhat milky sky and perhaps some reduced visibilities, particularly late tonight into early Sunday morning. Meanwhile, the pleasant temperatures will continue through Monday, with northwesterly flow and a strong surface high maintaining their pronounced effects on the eastern half of the U.S. through this time. A weak shortwave trough will move into the central U.S. on Sunday, with fairly widespread convection expected in the High Plains tonight and again Sunday night. However, the large-scale descent from the elongated high in the central/eastern U.S. is expected to keep the precipitation mostly confined to our west. Most CAMs and coarser guidance keep us dry through Monday, and ensembles have followed suit with PoPs generally below 15 percent, even in our eastern Kansas counties. That said, we are on the western periphery of the lingering high pressure, so it is not impossible we see a shower or two through Sunday night if the upstream system is stronger than progged. Notably, the MPAS CAMs and the RRFS are a little more aggressive with development of a mesoscale convective vortex just to our west tomorrow, and all hint at some light precipitation in its proximity on Sunday. For now, think the chances are sufficiently low to keep precipitation out of the forecast through Monday, but this is worth keeping an eye on for potential re-inclusion of some precipitation chances in our far west at some point Sunday. Conditions will begin to warm up steadily after Monday, as an upper ridge in the southwestern U.S. expands its influence into much of the central/southern U.S. for most of the rest of the week. This will also keep the forecast area primarily dry during this period, as well, with the storm track remaining well northwest of the central Plains. However, some rather potent vorticity maxima will be ejecting from a deepening longwave trough in the northwestern U.S. late in the week. Models are struggling to figure out how far south and east any attendant convection will develop with these ejecting perturbations. Given the large-scale pattern, I suspect our region is too far southeast to see any meaningful effects from these vorticity maxima; however, there is a notable perturbation that ejects early enough in the period (Tuesday night into Wednesday) that may be reasonably successful in generating some convection in our far north/northwest zones (before the broad-scale high expands sufficiently far east to stunt southward progression of such systems). Thereafter, it will take a series of shortwave troughs to dampen the ridging downstream to get our region in play for precipitation, which will at least take the rest of the week. We may not stay dry through next weekend, though, if the 12z ensemble suite is to be believed. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SUNDAY/... Issued at 1138 AM CDT Sat Aug 2 2025 Main aviation issue today remains the smoke, but visibilities have improved to VFR late this morning. Satellite and observations upstream suggest that a smoky haze will likely continue for much of the next 24 hours, but its effects will be somewhat more limited than what was seen Friday and Friday night. For now, have kept VFR conditions at MCI through the period, though have included mention of smoke through tonight. Certainly not out of the question visibility returns to periodic MVFR tonight into early Sunday morning. Winds will generally be from the southeast today around 10 kt, becoming more easterly and diminishing to around 5 kt tonight. A return to southeast winds around 10 kt is expected on Sunday. && .EAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...Air Quality Alert until 7 PM CDT this evening for MOZ028-029- 037. KS...Air Quality Alert until 7 PM CDT this evening for KSZ103>105. && $$ DISCUSSION...CMS AVIATION...CMS