190
FXUS63 KSGF 010540
AFDSGF
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Springfield MO
1240 AM CDT Tue Jul 1 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Scattered showers and storms possible across the area this
afternoon and evening (40-60% chance). There is a Marginal (1
of 5) Risk for some of these storms to become severe, along
with a heavy rain risk for areas east of Highway 65.
- Some mild heat and rain relief mid-week following the frontal
passage before heat, humidity, and isolated rain chances
(15-30%) return for the 4th of July weekend and onwards.
&&
.SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
Issued at 245 PM CDT Mon Jun 30 2025
Current Conditions and Synoptic Pattern: Water vapor and upper
air analysis shows a shortwave trough with embedded vorts
currently moving through Nebraska/Kansas/Iowa. The 12z KSGF
sounding measured slightly warmer air aloft and a substantial
cap however plenty of moisture remains. A cold front was
located from about Kansas City to Wichita and was moving
southeast. A subtle outflow boundary has pushed into
southcentral Missouri. Vis satellite was showing substantial
breaks in the clouds with temps reaching the lower 80s. RAP
analysis shows about 500-1500j/kg of ML CAPE across the area
with the highest instability east of Springfield.
This Afternoon through Tonight: Expect instability to continue
to increase with heating however dewpoints and temps overall are
not expected to reach as high as yesterday. 0-3km theta-e diffs
are also much lower than yesterday (15-20C) therefore localized
damaging winds to 60mph will be the main concern if storms can
get organized. Highest chances for a severe storm will
generally be east of Highway 65 however we are not expecting
anything close to the magnitude or extent of yesterday. HREF
guidance shows that storm coverage will be highest from 4pm
through about 9pm. PW values around 1.8in and slow storm
motions will also promote a risk for a few instances of flash
flooding, especially given saturated soils and higher than
normal stream flows.
&&
.LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
Issued at 245 PM CDT Mon Jun 30 2025
Tuesday and Wednesday: Surface high pressure looks to slide
overhead and dewpoints should finally drop back down into the
lower 60s. NBM suggests highs in the lower to middle 80s Tuesday
and the middle to upper 80s on Wednesday. A somewhat comfortable
and dry few days before the heat, humidity and rain chances
return late week.
Thursday through the weekend: Ensembles suggest that some upper
level energy will try to slide in as early as Thursday however
there will be mid level ridging at the same time which should
limit the rain chances to less than 20 percent. Slightly higher
chances (20-40%) return Friday into the weekend as the flow
turns slightly southwesterly and lift increases. An increase in
temps and dews are likely with heat indicies reaching the middle
to upper 90s as well.
&&
.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 1240 AM CDT Tue Jul 1 2025
Some very light mist and developing low clouds have been
observed at SGF. This is coincident with short-term guidance
suggesting a 60-80% chance for IFR to LIFR cigs to develop at
all TAF sites (greatest confidence at SGF as cooler air rises up
the Ozark Plateau). The mist developing could be from build
down of the low clouds, so have put TEMPOs with lowered
visibilities as well.
Otherwise, winds will be light at 3-8 kts out of the north for
the whole period, with clouds and visibilities gradually
clearing after 14Z.
&&
.SGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
KS...None.
MO...None.
&&
$$
SHORT TERM...Burchfield
LONG TERM...Burchfield
AVIATION...Price