Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Shreveport, LA
Issued by NWS Shreveport, LA
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635 FXUS64 KSHV 040721 AFDSHV Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Shreveport LA 221 AM CDT Sat May 4 2024 ...New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM... .SHORT TERM... (Saturday through Sunday) Issued at 122 AM CDT Sat May 4 2024 Pretty quiet this morning for a change with plentiful high cloud cover present from anvil blowoff from storms early Friday evening across Central Texas. The cirrus is thin enough such that we are seeing some radiational fog across our eastern half. This should mix out by mid morning and while patchy dense fog will be possible, it does not appear to be widespread enough to warrant any advisory this morning. A wedge of drier air has settled in across the I-20 Corridor in the form of PWATS near or slightly below one inch from NE TX into N LA. While this moisture will recover somewhat by afternoon, it should result in less precip coverage areawide and thus have backed off NBM pops slightly, more in the range of slight chance/chance variety tied to daytime heating. Whatever storm coverage we see this afternoon should dissipate quickly with the loss of daytime heating. We then await a much stronger disturbance poised to impact our region late tonight and through the day Sunday. This disturbance, embedded in southwesterly flow aloft, will eject out of the Tx Hill Country this evening, moving rapidly towards the Piney Woods of NE TX into the Middle Red River Valley of SE OK by 12z Sun. Widespread showers and thunderstorms will accompany this disturbance overnight with a pretty tight pop gradient after midnight, ranging from categorical pops across NE TX, SE OK and extreme SW AR to slight chance pops across our far eastern zones. Marginal Threat of Severe Thunderstorms will exist across our northwest half after midnight as the decaying MCS makes good progress into our region prior to 12z Sun. Expanded categorical pops eastward across all but our extreme eastern zones Sun Morning as the decaying system continues moving east and with the atmosphere likely worked over Sunday Morning, backed pops back to high chance variety across most areas by Sunday Afternoon. A Slight chance of Excessive, Heavy Rainfall is outlooked across our western half on Sunday and this appears to be mostly for Sunday Morning with rainfall amounts near one to two inches possible through the day Sunday. We should be able to take this additional rainfall without too much in the way of difficulties other than small additional rises on area waterways. Therefore, Flood Watches do not appear to be necessary with the onset of this next storm system tonight through Sunday. 13 && .LONG TERM... (Sunday Night through Saturday) Issued at 122 AM CDT Sat May 4 2024 Trough ejects out to our north and east Sunday Night with weak upper ridging in its wake. Another upper level trough will rapidly eject out of the Intermountain West and into the Southern/Central Plains on Monday. While most of our region will be removed from the impacts of this next trough, forcing will be slightly enhanced across our northern zones so kept with NBM`s handling of mostly chance pops across our northern half with slight chance pops south for Monday. Pretty uneventful day planned for Tue other than slight chance pops near and northwest of the I-30 Corridor, then southwest flow aloft begins to become enhanced as we await disturbances embedded in this flow to impact our region Wed into Thu. Latest operational runs of the GFS and ECMWF are in pretty good agreement with a frontal intrusion into our region sometime Wed Night into Thu and this will result in our next chance for strong to severe thunderstorms, not to mention periods of locally heavy rainfall once again. Progs show this frontal intrusion pushing completely through our region Thu Night through Friday with drier and somewhat milder conditions for Friday and into the upcoming weekend and this would be a break from the parade of systems and rainfall our region has seen recently. In advance of this cold front, our region will likely experience some of the hottest temperatures we`ve seen this Spring with afternoon highs Tue and Wed ranging from the middle and upper 80s to the lower 90s across our entire region. With high dewpoints in place, heat indices both afternoons could push 100 degrees in some locations. 13 && .AVIATION... (06Z TAFS) Issued at 1244 AM CDT Sat May 4 2024 Terminal winds have gone just about calm airspace wide this evening and given the close T/Td relations, some BR has started to develop, reducing VSBY at select terminals. That being said, cirrus will continue to filter across the airspace over the next several hours, which may limit the extent of the BR influence VSBY impact. Over the next few hours though, given limited cloud coverage across the central and eastern airspace terminals, VSBY will likely continue to fall through early Saturday morning. Just after 12z, VSBY should recover, with much of the airspace under dense OVC with some gradual BKN returning by the evening. While this package does not discuss the arrival of SHRA/TSRA, the 12z period will begin to introduce this. RK && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... SHV 86 69 80 66 / 40 40 100 20 MLU 85 66 80 66 / 40 20 70 20 DEQ 83 64 74 64 / 50 100 100 20 TXK 84 67 77 65 / 50 80 100 20 ELD 85 64 77 64 / 40 30 90 20 TYR 83 68 78 67 / 50 100 100 20 GGG 84 67 78 65 / 50 100 100 20 LFK 84 68 79 65 / 40 90 100 20 && .SHV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... AR...None. LA...None. OK...None. TX...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...13 LONG TERM....13 AVIATION...53