


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Kansas City/Pleasant Hill, MO
Issued by NWS Kansas City/Pleasant Hill, MO
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749 FXUS63 KEAX 040843 AFDEAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Kansas City/Pleasant Hill MO 343 AM CDT Fri Jul 4 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Seasonably Warm, Increasing Humidity - Isolated Storms Friday Afternoon - Scattered Storm Activity Saturday, Marginal Risk for Strong to Severe Storms && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 343 AM CDT Fri Jul 4 2025 Amplified H5 ridge axis has entered the eastern Plains early this morning and will continue to propagate eastward through the remainder of the afternoon. Across the western CONUS a few stronger short-wave perturbations, with a few also in Canada, have been providing subtle disruptions downstream resulting in scattered precipitation activity across different regions of the country. One of these vort maxima has moved into the Front Range and has provided just enough dCVA and lift to attempt a surface cyclogenesis process. This has turned lower-level troposphere flow south to southwesterly across much of the Plains into the Mississippi River Valley. This will lead to temperatures in the upper 80s to lower 90s this afternoon, with dewpoints steadily increasing into the upper 60s. That could be a tad high for the actual dewpoint range, if boundary layer mixing is stronger, that could result in dewpoints topping out more around the lower to mid 60s. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop over Central Kansas this afternoon shortly after peak heating, and along with a mid-level vort max progged to eject eastward. There is some potential that this forcing may sneak far enough eastward to develop thunderstorm activity from eastern Kansas to around the Hwy. 65 corridor across central Missouri. Depending on how much time skies remain clear this afternoon, a stronger MLCAPE axis is possible, with HREF mean MUCAPE values approaching 2000 J/kg. The simulated reflectivity fields in various CAMs do depict some cores developing, but do not last very long, and this lines up with the progged environment. There is very weak mid to upper-level flow present, therefore very little shear to truly organize convection. The main hazard if isolated to scattered storms develop this afternoon and evening would be lightning. Saturday, H5 ridge axis completely slides eastward, with a stronger vort maxima propagating across the Central Plains and associated weak surface wave. Continued low-level theta-e advection should result in another unstable boundary layer, that could form during the late morning hours. With better convergence present in this thermodynamic environment, expecting to see a couple of rounds of scattered thunderstorm activity, especially along and west of Hwy. 65. Current model soundings suggest stronger cores could produce downburst winds at times, with lower static stability in the boundary layer, some precip loading around 800mb, and just enough of a dry pocket to promote some evaporative cooling. The deep layer shear environment still does not look overly impressive, but if the vort maxima comes in stronger than currently progged in deterministic output, may see 0-6km bulk shear reach close 30 kts, perhaps enough to organize a few updrafts. The SPC SWODY2 marginal risk for our northwest counties highlights this risk. For the remainder of the weak, a 594dam high is progged to setup over the southwest CONUS, with multiple disturbances set to move through the northwesterly flow. Most ensemble suites depict low-end probabilities nearly every day next week for measurable precipitation. Deep-layer shear may be hard to come by, therefore not seeing any signals for a robust, organized severe setup at this time through the middle of next week. Anything stronger will have to be largely mesoscale driven. Temperatures will mostly be in the upper 80s to lower 90s through next week. Inner-quartile spread amongst NBM members is wider, and this is likely due to uncertainty with timing of shower activity and associated cloud clover throughout much of next week. This type of large scale synoptic pattern is fairly typical for July and August for eastern Kansas to Central Missouri. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 1148 PM CDT Thu Jul 3 2025 VFR conditions are expected to largely prevail through the period. Clear skies overnight will give way to cumulus after 15Z Saturday along with marginally gusty southerly winds. Can`t rule out an isolated storm west of highway 65 from 22Z Friday- 01Z Saturday. Thereafter, could be some brief reductions in visibility in smoke. && .EAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...None. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Krull AVIATION...BT