Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS New Orleans/Baton Rouge, LA

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636 FXUS64 KLIX 270455 AFDLIX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New Orleans LA 1155 PM CDT Wed Jun 26 2024 ...New AVIATION... .SHORT TERM... (This evening through Sunday) Issued at 415 PM CDT Wed Jun 26 2024 Today has been difficult to say the least with respect to convection. At one point it looked like we would remain most rain free until possibly this evening and then around 16//17z convection begin to fire across a good chunk of the area as we heated up. But shortly after storm tried to grow they all began to collapse. The lack of any real mid lvl flow along with very warm mid lvl temps likely the cause of convection struggling but by mid afternoon it was becoming apparent that we were getting squeezed as widespread convection just off to our west and northeast was going strong. The biggest concern is the convection to our west and northwest as it could me the main concern for tonight and tomorrow. As for tonight, looking at current radar trends the line from a decaying MCS continue to surge south through central LA and into southwestern and south-central LA. While robust storms are developing across southwestern LA ahead of the line. These storms will eventually move east into the area later today/tonight along with the remnants of the storms in northern MS and northeast LA. Even if it is just a boundary that drops into the area from the north that will likely be what helps storms develop quickly tomorrow morning. So the question is how much convection do we have overnight and then when and where does convection fire tomorrow and how much. The hostile environment currently over the area will gradually improve as mid lvl temps cool with the approach of the disturbance moving through the Lower MS Valley and mid lvl winds pick up just a little more. The problem with overnight is we will lose the high instability we currently have in place. Yes it will still be unstable but nothing close to what we have in place right now. So do the improving mid lvls help more than the lowering instability. At this time given what is on radar it would appear that the improving mid lvl features combining with multiple colliding boundaries should keep convection going through the evening till about 5/6z. We will likely see things die down quickly with isolated to widely scattered showers through the morning hours and sunrise but after that once we begin to heat up into the mid to upper 80s storms should begin to redevelop and could quickly fire up along a boundary. The biggest concern with convection tomorrow is PoPs may be too high for southwest MS and adjacent LA parishes. A lot will depend on the eventual location of the boundary/remnants from the convection to our north by morning. If this is farther south closer to I-12 then that northern 3rd could struggle to get much convection tomorrow. As for temperatures or more so heat, should not be a big concern tomorrow thanks to convection and cloud cover. Friday is tricky as we should still have the remnants of the disturbance dropping into our area tonight. However, at the same time we will see the ridge to our west start to build to the east over the region. We may be far enough on the southeastern edge to allow for one last day of decent rain coverage but on the other hand the ridge could build in enough to star to shut down convective potential in the northwest. Given the increase in mid lvl temps expected and the ridge shown by most models building to the east quickly and inclined to lower PoPs across the northwest a little. Temps will already be inching back up but as for the potential for a heat advisory we should see heat indices remain below 108 for most of the area. This weekend looks hot. A few models continue to try and develop precip across the area but have a very hard time seeing this. The ridge is expected to be centered over the area or just off to the northwest while mid lvl temps warm back up and some models are indicating h5 temps as warm as -2 to -4C. Temps of this magnitude typically shut down any convection potential yet most models are still indicating convection. Not confident enough to completely knock PoPs down but across the northwest both Saturday and Sunday will begin a trend to drop PoPs into the 20-30% range and see if models and the NBM swing back that way. As for temperatures ll temps will be warm and with h85 temps of 20-21C highs in the mid to upper 90s seems likely a highly likely scenario. Combine that with a very humid airmass and we will see oppressive conditions grip the area again and it looks like this is only the start as we head into the new work week. /CAB/ && .LONG TERM... (Monday through Tuesday night) Issued at 415 PM CDT Wed Jun 26 2024 As northern stream upper level trough moving across the Great Lakes Sunday evening, it`ll continue eastward into the Atlantic Ocean Monday. The upper ridge in the wake of this trough will be sliding east across the entire Mississippi Valley Monday into Tuesday. Global models are in good agreement that this 596/7dm high pressure will be centered near the Akrlatex region Monday afternoon. Excluding rain potential, increasing 500mb heights will bring already above normal weekend temps up even more. Guidance spread is fairly minimal and as of 12z runs, Monday has the potential to be the warmest with highs mid/upper 90s to 100 degrees. Will say though that GFSbfr 925mb sounding temp is higher Sunday than Monday. Regardless, convective coverage will probably be the bigger deciding factor on max temps. A weak residual surface boundary may still be in place Monday which, combined with forecast temps, would support scattered to numerous showers and storms. If convective initiation is early enough, heat indicies will get knocked down quickly. However, if not too early, widespread upper 70 to 80 degree dewpoints with hot temps may provoke an Excessive Heat Warning issuance. Tuesday will virtually mirror with the same heat/convection timing challenges as the center of the upper ridge will be progressing eastward fairly slowly. /MEFFER/ && .AVIATION...
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(06Z TAFS) Issued at 1155 PM CDT Wed Jun 26 2024 VFR conditions prevail at all area airports and will persist through the overnight hours. Conditions for all area airports, especially KMSY, KNEW, KGPT, and KHUM will drop to MVFR conditions due to lower ceilings and visibilities from scattered showers and storms that will fire up along a lingering boundary in the morning hours between 8a and noon. Wind shifts greater than 30 degrees will be possible tomorrow mid-morning. Conditions will start to improve to VFR by the late afternoon and early evening hours tomorrow and will persist at VFR conditions through the end of the forecast period. MSW
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&& .MARINE... Issued at 415 PM CDT Wed Jun 26 2024 Weak pressure gradient still in place and likely to remain through through weak. Light winds will continue with winds slowly shifting out of the west. Still expect the typical diurnal increase in winds east of the MS Delta and then winds along the coast and near shore waters will also be dictated by diurnal fluctuations. Considering the very moist airmass and light low level winds, there will be potential for slow moving or nearly stationary waterspouts at times. /CAB/ && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
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MCB 92 72 88 72 / 20 60 50 30 BTR 96 77 92 77 / 30 30 70 30 ASD 94 76 89 76 / 20 40 70 50 MSY 94 79 89 80 / 20 20 90 50 GPT 94 76 89 76 / 20 50 90 60 PQL 96 76 92 75 / 20 50 80 60
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&& .LIX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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LA...None. GM...None. MS...None. GM...None.
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&& $$ SHORT TERM...CAB LONG TERM....ME AVIATION...MSW MARINE...CAB