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Severe Thunderstorms for the Center of the Nation; Fire Weather Concerns; Flooding Issues for the Great Lakes Region

A round of severe thunderstorms are forecast across areas of the Southern Plains, Mississippi Valley and Great Lakes this afternoon and tonight; The threat for flash flooding will also accompany these storms. The rainfall for the Great Lakes region could prolong the ongoing flooding. Where the rain is needed, the Southern High Plains, critical fire weather concerns through today. Read More >

Here is the latest Area Forecast Discussion for Central PA

This text statement is the latest forecast reasoning from the NWS in State College, PA

See the links at the bottom of the page for previous issuances/versions of the statement as well as our other text statements.


066
FXUS61 KCTP 180852
AFDCTP

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service State College PA
452 AM EDT Sat Apr 18 2026

.WHAT HAS CHANGED...
* Included more timing/threat assessment for thunderstorm
potential this afternoon/evening.
* Added mentions of flash flooding this evening and into Sunday
morning across portions of northern Pennsylvania.
* Brief mention of fire weather concerns through the middle of
the work week.

&&

.KEY MESSAGES...
1) Cold front brings showers and thunderstorms to central
Pennsylvania Saturday afternoon into Sunday morning. Some storms
could be severe across western Pennsylvania late this afternoon
and into the evening, flash flooding possible across northern
Pennsylvania.

2) Frost/freeze potential across northern/western Pennsylvania
Sunday night into Monday morning. Widespread damaging
frost/freeze threat extends across all of central Pennsylvania
Monday night into Tuesday morning.

3) Marginal fire weather concerns this afternoon ahead of the
cold front. Drier conditions early this week into the middle of
the week will fuel multiple days of marginal fire weather risk.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
KEY MESSAGE 1: Cold front brings showers and thunderstorms to
central Pennsylvania Saturday afternoon into Sunday morning.
Some storms could be severe across western Pennsylvania late
this afternoon and into the evening, flash flooding possible
across northern Pennsylvania.

A line of showers with isolated thunderstorms along a cold
front is currently stationed across eastern Michigan extending
southwestward towards the St. Louis metro area. Current radar
trends outline gradually weakening of embedded thunderstorms
with potentially a slight decrease in overall coverage of
showers as of 8Z/4A EDT due to much more stable air in place
across the region. More recent hi-res model guidance suggests
that the main leading line will become more broken in nature by
sunrise and continue to fizzle out as it approaches western
OH/KY. Ahead of this front, daytime heating will allow for some
destabilization, with recent guidance guidance indicating a
narrow corridor of SBCAPE between 500-1000 J/kg. At this time,
probably looking towards closer to 500-700 J/kg with highest
model solutions outlining slightly less in the way of cloud
cover; however, also want to outline favorable shear in place
for the severe threat this afternoon/evening. The western half
of Pennsylvania looks to be at most risk for some damaging wind
threat this afternoon/evening with favorable shear and slightly
better chances at getting some higher-end instability values
mentioned earlier. In this area, cannot rule out an isolated
spin-up tornado; however LCLs remain unfavorable for this risk.
Further east, shear will remain favorable; however, stable air
is more likely to be in place, especially closer to sunset in
this locations. All this jives fairly well with SPC`s Slight
Risk (level 2/5) for severe weather across western Pennsylvania
with a Marginal Risk (level 1/2) extending slightly east of this
area. The best timing based on a consensus of hi-res model
guidance looks to be in the 3PM to 7PM timeframe; however,
cannot rule out storms an hour or two on either side of that
timeframe today.

Flash flood risk is non-zero later this evening and into the
Sunday morning hours. Ample PWATs in place between 1.00-1.50"
are well-above average climatologically, pushing closer to the
90-95th percentile in some locations. Looking at forecast HREF
PWATs at ILN at 12Z would be pushing closer to ~1.25", where
sounding climatology would outline this above the 90th
percentile for a 12Z sounding at ILN. That, on top of multiple
rounds of showers could lead to isolated instances of flash
flooding across the fairly wet soils on northern Pennsylvania
this evening. FFGs in this area are super low, even at six-hour
time horizons with most of the northern tier looking at less
than an inch in six hours for some flooding concerns. Localized
downpours in thunderstorms in this region would make this fairly
easy to be accomplished across the northern tier, thus there is
no surprise that the Weather Prediction Center has outlined a
Marginal Risk (level 1/4) of Excessive Rainfall across much of
the northern tier of our counties.

-----------------------------------------------

KEY MESSAGE 2: Frost/freeze potential across northern/western
Pennsylvania Sunday night into Monday morning. Widespread
damaging frost/freeze threat extends across all of central
Pennsylvania Monday night into Tuesday morning.

Cold temperatures in the wake of the cold front are virtually
certain to bring widespread frost/freeze concerns for all of
central Pennsylvania for the second half of the weekend and into
the beginning stages of the work week. Cold front will be
halfway through the area on Sunday night, which will allow for
much cooler temperatures across the northwestern half of the
Commonwealth Sunday night into Monday morning. Newest forecast
has freeze concerns for much of northern and western halves of
the area by Monday morning. An area of high pressure setting up
over the Great Lakes will allow for some reinforcing cold air to
settle into the region late Monday evening into Tuesday
morning. Widespread sub-freezing temperatures are very likely
north of the Turnpike and likely could extend southward to the
PA-MD border, and we`ll likely need a Freeze Watch in the next
cycle or two in order to message this threat. Those with
agricultural interests will need to monitor this threat,
especially given the mild conditions much of the area has
experienced over the past couple of days. The growing season has
been activated for all but four zones (Tioga/Sullivan/Potter
Counties and Northern Lycoming County) across central
Pennsylvania as of 04/18/2026, see PNSCTP for those details.

-----------------------------------------------

KEY MESSAGE 3: Marginal fire weather concerns this afternoon
ahead of the cold front. Drier conditions early this week into
the middle of the week will fuel multiple days of marginal fire
weather risk.

Sneaky fire weather day across the southwestern zones of
central Pennsylvania (Somerset, Bedford, Fulton) with marginal
minimum relative humidities and gusty winds ahead of a cold
frontal passage. Current relative humidity forecast in this
region remains above critical thresholds, with lowest point
values across much of Bedford County reaching into the 30-35%
range this afternoon. This runs fairly close with the RH minimum
ensemble member for relative humidity values today, so hard
time seeing them break much lower into the ~25-30% range. Gusty
winds will tick one of the boxes for the potential for elevated
risk for wildfire spread this afternoon; however, given the
marginal nature of RHs, will need to talk to our forestry
partners to gather the fuel moisture situation in these regions.

Looking into the beginning of next week, relative humidities
dip down closer to the ~30% critical threshold with Monday
outlining the best potential for some post-frontal gusty winds.
We`ll likely need to see where wetting rain falls over the next
24 hours and reassess fuel moistures into the beginning of next
week; however, Monday will be a day to watch going forward due
to gusty winds and marginal RHs. Tuesday will also be a notable
day to watch in the fire weather realm with current forecast
outlining RHs dipping below 30% in spots; however, less wind to
contend with so that`s where further evaluation of fuels will
become increasingly important after rainfall exits the area.

&&

.AVIATION /08Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
All sites VFR 06z Saturday. A marine layer moving in from the
east late tonight could bring some MVFR or IFR cigs to MDT, LNS,
and even IPT after 9Z and lasting until 15-17z before
scattering out. Otherwise to the west of the marine layer,
clouds are expected to be scattered with high bases. Showers and
thunderstorms will start to impact western airfields by 20-23Z.
Lightning activity will wane as storms continue moving east
after 00Z Sun. However periods of showers will continue into Sat
night. MVFR ceilings are favored areawide Saturday night with
some IFR possible as well. Winds will shift and become NW later
Sat night with gusts to 20-30 kts.

Outlook...

Sun...Restrictions in -SHRA possible mainly N/W, transition to
SHSN across higher elevations overnight Sunday night into Monday
morning.

Mon...Lingering -SHSN possible early N/W; otherwise, dry
conditions with VFR prevailing.

Tue...Dry with VFR conditions prevailing early, rain showers
possible during the afternoon and evening hours.

Wed...NW flow with potential restrictions and a chc of -SHRA
N/W

&&

.CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.

&&

$$

WHAT HAS CHANGED...Beaty
KEY MESSAGES...Beaty
DISCUSSION...Beaty
AVIATION...Banghoff/Colbert


 

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