


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO
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032 FXUS63 KLSX 010327 AFDLSX Area Forecast Discussion...Updated Aviation National Weather Service Saint Louis MO 1027 PM CDT Sat May 31 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - The warmest temperatures the area has seen in a couple weeks are forecast to start the week, with highs on Monday and Tuesday pushing 90 degrees for some locations. - While there are low rain chances (30% or less) for portions of the area tonight and tomorrow, the next chance (60-80%) for a widespread soaking rain is late Tuesday into Wednesday, with active weather continuing into next weekend. && .SHORT TERM... (Through Late Sunday Night) Issued at 214 PM CDT Sat May 31 2025 An upper-level trough is digging across the eastern CONUS, with the Middle Mississippi Valley beneath northwesterly flow on its western periphery per recent water vapor imagery. This northwesterly flow has kept our weather relatively calm, our humidity low, and our skies smokey today. Thanks to the mostly clear skies and current mesoanalysis showing 850 mb temps around 13C, surface temperatures have warmed into the low to mid 80s for most locations - the warmest we`ve seen since mid-May. This evening and tonight, two features will be responsible for low chances of isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms. The first is a backdoor cold front this evening that will move into our west-central and south-central Illinois counties. Forcing along this front will be weak and vertical thermal profiles poor for convective development. However, some deterministic soundings show weak instability that may yield a brief isolated shower, possibly a thunderstorm, in this part of the area early to mid evening. The second feature is a tightly-wound shortwave currently moving south- southeastward through the Central Plains. This shortwave`s trajectory will keep it just west of the CWA tonight, though some of its associated convection may clip portions of central and southeastern Missouri overnight. Meager MUCAPE (a couple hundred J/kg) will allow for some convection to carry a lightning threat, but the low instability and weak deep layer shear (20-25 kts) will mitigate a threat of strong to severe storms. Sunday will be similar to today as northwesterly flow persists over the region. Recent HRRR runs indicate that the wildfire smoke aloft will be more dense, but that is unlikely to have much impact on temperatures, which are expected to be a degree or two warmer as ridging slowly pushes into the region from the west. The front, or rather, it`s remnants, may serve as the focus for isolated to scattered convection across far southeastern Missouri during afternoon peak heating. Elmore && .LONG TERM... (Monday through Next Saturday) Issued at 214 PM CDT Sat May 31 2025 At the start of the extended period on Monday, guidance consensus is that the axis of the upper-level ridge will be almost directly over the Middle Mississippi Valley, with the mid-level ridge being relatively displaced eastward. This will place the CWA squarely beneath deep southerly to southwesterly flow that will ramp up warm air advection and push 850 mb temperatures to around +16C. As a result, surface temperatures will warm to the mid to upper 80s - about 5-10 degrees above climatological normals. For Tuesday, temperatures will be similar to those on Monday, with perhaps more widespread upper 80s as warm air advection ramps up ahead of an approaching trough. This approaching trough will increase cloud cover over the region, though by how much and its impact on temperatures remains uncertain at this time. The bigger story with the approaching trough is that it marks the start of what will be an active period for the CWA from the middle to at least late next week. An initial shortwave within the trough will eject out of the Plains and into the Midwest Tuesday into Wednesday per deterministic guidance, with a low traveling along a cold front draped from the Central Plains into the Great Lakes. As it and its parent shortwave approach the CWA late on Tuesday, lift will increase via these features and a low-level jet, leading to widespread showers and thunderstorms developing along the front into Wednesday. Both deterministic and ensemble guidance have SBCAPE reaching 1,000-1,500 J/kg ahead of the front among moderate deep- layer shear of generally 30 kts, leading to a low concern for strong to severe storms. However, the deep layer shear vector and low-level jet nearly parallel to the front is expected to lead to destructive interference among updrafts and limit updraft strength. If anything, this looks like a setup favorable for locally heavy rainfall, though guidance is currently not too excited on QPF amounts. Confidence in impacts from heavy rainfall remains low at this time. Guidance consensus breaks down late Wednesday into the remainder of the period on the phasing of the trough and subsequent shortwaves. Generally, southwesterly flow aloft is expected to persist through the end of the workweek, with a shortwave or two within this flow bringing subsequent rounds of rain to portions of the area. For the weekend, guidance varies on whether the trough shifts eastward, or remains just west of or over the Middle Mississippi Valley. Regardless, southwesterly to quasi-zonal flow over the CWA is seen in the majority of deterministic guidance and global ensembles, keeping chances going for shortwaves within the flow to bring rounds of rain to the area through the weekend. At the very least, the constant chances of rain and associated cloud cover will keep temperatures around seasonal normals (low to mid 80s) through this stretch. Elmore && .AVIATION... (For the 06z TAFs through 06z Sunday Night) Issued at 1020 PM CDT Sat May 31 2025 Dry, VFR conditions are forecast at the terminals through the valid TAF period. The mid-level shortwave that is forcing convection across eastern Kansas and western Missouri is staying west enough of the central Missouri terminals to keep any threat of thunder at bay. A few storms approached KCOU and KJEF but collapsed before getting near enough for impacts. With the main thrust of the upper-level wave moving south, the chances for any thunder overnight in central Missouri are very low (less than 10%). The backdoor cold front continues to push east out of central and northern Illinois, though is slower than previously forecast. With such weak winds overall and the threat for any convection along this front so low, operational impacts are very unlikely (less than 10%). Guidance continues to hint at fog at KJEF just before sunrise, but there`s little to support that in the current observations. On the very off-chance that fog develops, it will be short- lived and unlikely to reach IFR flight category. MRB && .LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...None. IL...None. && $$ WFO LSX