National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce

Severe Thunderstorms and Heavy Rain in the Southern U.S.; Snow in the Northern Rockies and Northern Plains

A storm system will shift from eastern Texas into the lower Mississippi Valley today with additional threats of severe thunderstorms and heavy to excessive rainfall which may bring flooding. In the northern U.S., a storm will bring heavy snow and gusty winds over parts of the northern Rockies, northern Plains, and Upper Midwest today into Wednesday. Read More >

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Last Map Update: Mon, Nov 24, 2025 at 6:52:17 am CST

Fog continues across parts of the area with the potential for some areas of dense fog across parts of western Oklahoma and into adjacent portions of western north Texas with sudden changes in visibility. Fog may linger through the morning hours Monday and effect the morning commute.
Patchy fog can surprise you: Be ready for sudden changes in visibility. Turn on your low-beam headlights when approaching fog. Drive slowly, and keep your distance from other vehicles. Use extra caution on bridges and in valleys.
Showers and storms will diminish from west to east through tomorrow with the greatest chances for precipitation across southeast Oklahoma and portions of western north Texas. A few storms storms along the Red River and southward may be possible with small hail and gusty winds. Continuous rainfall and brief heavy rainfall over portions of southern Oklahoma and into north Texas may lead to localized flooding concerns.
Showers and thunderstorms ending Monday. Turning cooler mid-week on with rain chances late Friday into the start of the weekend.
The skies will be mostly sunny on Thanksgiving day with a south wind at 5-10 mph and seasonably average temperatures with highs in the upper 50s to lower 60 across our area.
A cold front next weekend may bring a cold air mass southward out of Canada into the first week of December. Below normal temperatures are favored across Oklahoma and Texas during the first week of December. Some of the key uncertainties with the system bringing the cold air will be timing, strength and the presence of moisture.

Local Weather History For November 24th...
On November 24th, 2013, snow and sleet affected western and central
Oklahoma. A band of accumulations over four inches stretched from
near Hollis to just north of Lawton, with a maximum of thirteen
inches near Vinson. A mixture of snow and sleet resulted in
accumulations of almost two inches as far east as Oklahoma City.

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