National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce
    
                        
856
FXUS63 KSGF 161126
AFDSGF

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Springfield MO
526 AM CST Mon Feb 16 2026

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Dense Fog Advisory in effect until 9 AM this morning for
Howell, Oregon, Shannon, and Dent counties. If fog forms,
visibilities may drop below a half mile at times, especially
in low-lying areas.

- Windy Tuesday with gusts up to 40 mph possible west of
Springfield.

- Above-average temperatures are likely (70-90% chance) this
week with highs in the 60s and 70s through Thursday. Some
records may be broken.

&&

.SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
Issued at 254 AM CST Mon Feb 16 2026

Synoptic overview: High pressure currently sits over the Ozarks,
allowing for clear skies and calm winds. The trough/low that brought
rain late last week is moving off the east coast. Upper level
ridging is building in to the central U.S., though there are
embedded mid- and low-level shortwaves. The next big system can be
seen just off the west coast as it begins to bring precipitation to
northern California today.

Uninhibited cooling has resulted in lows overnight in the 30s and
low 40s, with some high 20s readings in valleys out east. A Dense
Fog Advisory began at 11 PM. Fog has not yet been observed within
the SGF CWA, though it is widespread and dense to the southeast into
Paducah and Little Rock`s areas. Hi-res models have reduced
visibilities moving farther into south-central Missouri over the
next few hours, but as a whole, guidance has backed off on fog
potential for our area. This is interesting given the clear skies,
obviously ample radiational cooling, calm winds, and recent
rainfall. Many observations have come in cooler than the crossover
temperature by this time, yet fog has not developed in those areas.
Will let the DFA ride for a few more hours, but if these conditions
continue, it will be cancelled early.

The pressure gradient tightens today with approaching surface low
pressure, increasing wind speeds particularly west of Hwy 65 to 15
to 20 mph with gusts of 25 to 30 mph. Flow will be from the south,
and with rising 850mb temperatures and mostly clear skies, highs
today will reach the mid to upper 60s. Winds decrease a bit after
sundown but only become calm in the far southeast, where ingredients
could theoretically come together again for some patchy fog, but the
odds aren`t as good as they are for the current early morning hours
wherein we still haven`t seen any fog. So, pretty doubtful there is
much to worry about tonight. Lows tonight dip to the low 40s out
east but remain in the low 50s to the west where cloud cover will be
higher.

&&

.LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
Issued at 254 AM CST Mon Feb 16 2026

Tuesday, shortwave energy approaches ever closer, and the pressure
gradient tightens even more. Tuesday will be the windiest day this
week, particularly west of Hwy 65, where sustained winds could reach
25 mph with gusts up to 40 mph. East of Hwy 65, sustained winds will
remain below 25 mph and gusts maximize at 30 mph. These strong south-
southwest winds will stream warm air into the area, resulting in
widespread highs in the 70s.

The surface front approaches Tuesday night, but moisture and
instability are lacking, keeping PoPs below 20% for most of the area
and 25-35% for the far northern counties. Better rain chances remain
north of the area, closer to the low pressure center. The main
effect of the frontal passage is the reduction in moisture for our
area; it will not have much of an impact on temperatures, which
continue to soar into midweek.

Wednesday will be the warmest day of the week with highs in the low
to mid 70s. Mostly sunny skies and high temperatures 20+ degrees
above normal will have Wednesday feeling like spring. Temperatures
stay high for Thursday before a negatively tilted surface trough
pushes through Thursday night and finally flips surface flow around
to the north. Some low pre-frontal PoPs up to 20% exist in the east
Thursday. Highs Friday are much closer to normal, right around 50.

Headed into the weekend, a low ejects northeast out of Texas,
potentially bringing more widespread rain. There is vast model
disagreement on this at the moment, so PoPs remain low for now.
Temperatures remain around normal through the weekend, though the
CPC 8-14 day outlook does indicate a 60-70% chance for above normal
temperatures.

&&

.AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z TUESDAY/...
Issued at 522 AM CST Mon Feb 16 2026

VFR conditions through the period. Southerly winds pick up speed
at the beginning of the period, gusting up to 25 kts for JLN
midday and up to 20 kts for SGF. Winds decrease after 0Z. Clear
CIG/VIS. LLWS at JLN up to 50 kts after 6Z.

&&

.CLIMATE...
Issued at 254 AM CST Mon Feb 16 2026

Record High Temperatures:

February 17:
KSGF: 73/1911
KJLN: 74/2011

February 18:
KSGF: 74/2016
KJLN: 78/1986
KVIH: 72/1991
KUNO: 77/1986

February 19:
KSGF: 75/2017
KVIH: 76/2017
KUNO: 73/1981


Record High Minimum Temperatures:

February 18:
KSGF: 51/1971

&&

.SGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
KS...None.
MO...Dense Fog Advisory until 9 AM CST this morning for MOZ083-097-
098-106.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...Nelson
LONG TERM...Nelson
AVIATION...Nelson
CLIMATE...Nelson