Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Shreveport, LA
Issued by NWS Shreveport, LA
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149 FXUS64 KSHV 050703 AFDSHV Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Shreveport LA 203 AM CDT Sun May 5 2024 ...New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM... .SHORT TERM... (Sunday through Monday) Issued at 114 AM CDT Sun May 5 2024 Showers and thunderstorms becoming widespread now in advance of an upper level disturbance embedded in southwesterly flow aloft across the Upper Red River Valley of N TX/S OK. Strongest storms reside along the southern edge of the large mass of precipitation that is currently impacting our Deep East Texas zones and these storms reside in some descent sfc based instability along with descent mid-level lapse rates. Further north, closer to the I-20 Corridor and north, elevated instability is sufficient enough that we could still see some hail with any elevated cores with descent lapse rates once again as far north as SE OK. 0-6km Bulk Shear values are weak such that we should not have to concern ourselves with supercell thunderstorms but multi-cell hail and/or wind producers will be possible again, mainly across the southern third of our region through the morning hours today. Kept the same trends of categorical pops across the western 2/3rds of our region today with the back edge of this activity quickly moving from west to east across our region through the morning hours. Beyond the Noon hour, we should see a break in the storm coverage across NE TX into N LA with precip coverage remaining high across our northern third due to the proximity of upper forcing with the exiting of the upper trough itself. There will continue to be a heavy rain/isolated flooding threat as well, mainly near and/or south of the I-20 Corridor this morning with the key word being mostly isolated. Pops come to and end across our northeast zones this evening with the departure of the disturbance. Weak ridging will prevail in the wake of the upper trough`s departure overnight but another, much weaker disturbance will move quickly north and east towards our region during the day Monday. This will provide the upper forcing necessary for additional shower and thunderstorm chances during the day Monday but coverage will not be near like what we have experienced this morning. Did not stray too far from NBM temps today through Monday. 13 && .LONG TERM... (Monday Night through Sunday) Issued at 114 AM CDT Sun May 5 2024 By Monday Night, a vigorous upper level trough will rapidly move out of the Intermountain West and into the Southern and Central Plains. This promises to be quite the severe weather producer from the Upper Red River Valley northward into Central Ok and much of KS but our far northwest zones will just get clipped by sufficient forcing for the development of scattered thunderstorms near but mainly north and west of the I-30 Corridor. Kept pops out of the forecast for Tue/Tue Night but southwest flow aloft begins to tighten once again for Wed into Wed Night as an elongated, longwave trough takes up residence from the Intermountain West, eastward across the Central Plains and into the Upper Great Lakes. This pattern is vigorous enough such that a cold front will begin moving south and east towards the I-30 Corridor Wed Night and towards the I-20 Corridor of NE TX and N LA during the day Thu into Thu Night. Needless to say, strong to severe thunderstorms will be possible across our far northwest zones late Wed/Wed Night and areawide Thu/Thu Night until we can get the cold front south of our region which may not occur until early Friday. The NBM has finally caught onto post frontal conditions and a welcomed drying trend for Fri thru at least Sat with milder post frontal temperatures as well so did not have to make much in the way of pop changes for late week into the upcoming weekend. 13 && .AVIATION... (06Z TAFS) Issued at 1224 AM CDT Sun May 5 2024 Convection continues to expand in coverage just west of the airspace tonight, and will start to impact the western terminals within the next hour before impacting all terminals later this morning. Given the close proximity to GGG, TYR and LFK, have added a TEMPO group for TSRA at these terminals through the first few hours of the TAF period. Not expecting TSRA airspace wide, but more SHRA coverage through much of the period before some clearing later this afternoon. Still some uncertainty on redevelopment of SHRA/TSRA later this afternoon. Latest CAMs suggest a few pop up showers, maybe some isolated TSRA. For now, elected to add some VCSH for most around 00z. Plan is to continue monitoring trends and reevaluate later this morning. RK && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... SHV 79 68 85 73 / 100 20 40 10 MLU 82 67 85 71 / 80 30 30 10 DEQ 74 62 81 67 / 100 20 40 40 TXK 78 66 84 71 / 100 20 40 20 ELD 78 64 83 68 / 100 40 40 10 TYR 78 67 83 72 / 100 20 30 10 GGG 78 66 84 72 / 100 20 40 10 LFK 79 66 85 72 / 100 20 30 0 && .SHV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... AR...None. LA...None. OK...None. TX...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...13 LONG TERM....13 AVIATION...53