Valid Wed Jun 7, 2023
Valid Thu Jun 8, 2023
Valid Fri Jun 9, 2023
+ Additional Links
- » Description of the National Forecast Chart
- » Product Archives
- » Download hazards in KML or shapefile format or GeoJSON format





















NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
333 PM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
Valid 00Z Thu Jun 08 2023 - 00Z Sat Jun 10 2023
...Hazardous air quality levels will persist across the Northeast and
Mid-Atlantic through Thursday before shifting westward into Ohio Valley on
Friday...
...Heavy rainfall possible throughout central and northern Rockies on
Wednesday; rainfall threat will shift northward into Montana on Thursday
and Friday...
...Below-average temperatures to continue in the East and Southwest, while
Pacific Northwest and Plains stay above-average.
Hazardous air quality and widespread smoky conditions will persist through
Wednesday afternoon and evening throughout the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic
as smoke associated with wildfires in Canada continues to push southward
into the lower 48. As a nearly stationary upper-low churns off the New
England coastline, sustained northerly winds will allow the smoke to
spread southward, with major metro areas such as Boston, New York City,
Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. expected to experience unhealthy air
quality levels for all age groups through Thursday, before winds shift
more easterly, pushing smoke further west into the interior Northeast and
Ohio Valley on Friday. It is important to limit time outdoors, as exposure
to air pollutants can aggravate health problems such as asthma, heart
disease, and lung disease. To ensure proper safety, take breaks when
possible or wear a mask that will help protect you from the smoke. In
addition to the smoke, breezy winds and low humidity over portions of the
Lower Great Lakes and Mid-Atlantic, where conditions remain very dry due
to a recent lack of rainfall, have prompted an Elevated Risk of Fire
Weather from the Storm Prediction Center through Wednesday afternoon.
Elsewhere, there will be numerous chances for heavy rainfall across the
interior Pacific Northwest and Intermountain West through Friday as
anomalous moisture from the Gulf of Mexico continues to stream
northwestward into the region between a closed low across the Great Basin
and an upper-level ridge in the Plains. Wet antecedent soil conditions in
conjunction with isolated heavy rainfall rates approaching 1"/hr in
developing thunderstorms could lead to flash flooding concerns through
Wednesday afternoon across the central and northern Rockies, resulting in
an expansive Slight Risk of Excessive Rainfall for the region. The threat
of heavy rainfall will continue into Thursday and Friday, with the primary
risk area shifting into Montana and Idaho as the upper low pushes
northward. 48-hour rainfall totals across western Montana may approach
1-2", with locally heavier amounts possible as developing thunderstorms
produce rainfall rates of up to 1"/hr, resulting in the issuance of a
Slight Risk of Excessive Rainfall for the region through Friday.
Temperature-wise, with the aforementioned persistent upper-low across the
Northeast, conditions will remain cool through the end of the week with
temperature anomalies of 10-20 degrees below average, as daytime highs
remain in the upper 60s to low 70s. Similarly, most of coastal California
will remain in the 60s while highs will be warmer, but still below
average, in the interior valleys and Desert Southwest, with 80s to low 90s
expected. In contrast, under the ridging across the Plains and Northwest,
temperatures will be as much as 10-20 degrees above average. High
temperatures on Wednesday and Thursday in the Northern Plains and interior
Pacific Northwest will be in the upper 80s to low 90s.
Russell
Graphics available at
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
413 PM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
Valid 12Z Sat Jun 10 2023 - 12Z Wed Jun 14 2023
...A multi-day thunderstorm and local heavy rain threat will
continue into early next week from a very saturated Northern
Rockies through portions of the Great Plains...
...Heavy rain/strong thunderstorm threat from the
Midwest/Mid-South to the East this weekend into early next week
with closed low genesis...
...Texas/Vicinity Excessive Heat threat by next midweek may linger
as per the Climate Prediction Center...
...Overview...
A quite blocky flow pattern looks to persist through at least
early next week as an anomalously strong upper ridge/high remains
sandwiched between mean troughing/closed lows over the Southwest
and the Northeast. This pattern continues to support diurnal
showers and storms, some locally heavy, from the southern Plains
through the northern Rockies and parts of the Great Basin. The
next wave rounding the mid-continental ridge crosses Ontario and
approaches the Northeast this weekend, with growing consensus on
closing off a low over the Upper Great Lakes around Monday-Tuesday
next week. This would prompt an additional and locally enhanced
precipitation focus by the weekend into early next week out across
the east-central U.S. and then the Eastern Seaboard.
...Guidance Evaluation/Predictability Assessment...
There remains good agreement on the weather pattern across the
CONUS through early next week, again bolstering forecast
confidence. The WPC product suite valid for the first half of the
period (Saturday into Monday) was based on a composite blend of
the latest deterministic model solutions from the
GFS/ECMWF/UKMET/Canadian and the National Blend of Models. Even
into days 6 and 7 (Tuesday and Wednesday) though, models seem to
be similarly trending towards a fairly strong closed low over the
Great Lakes, with some weakening/opening up as it pushes into the
Northeast. Prefer a model and ensemble blend at these longer time
frames, but did slant the forecast in the direction of recent
Canadian runs that offer a slightly more amplified and less
progressive solution given nature of the blocky flow and any far
downstream affects from the expected emergence of Typhoon Guchul
into the Pacific westerlies next week. In this pattern out West,
the models agree in the idea that the closed low over
California/the Southwest should slowly split/open up and shift
east and possibly finally break down the blocky pattern. Plenty of
uncertainty and trends left to monitor though. This maintains good
continuity with the previous WPC progs as well.
...Weather/Hazards Highlights...
A daily risk for heavy showers and strong to severe thunderstorms
from the southern Plains through the northern Rockies and westward
into the Great Basin is expected to be slow to dislodge over about
the next week as tropical Pacific moisture remains funneled
northward between a strong central U.S. ridge and an upper
low/trough parked over California/the Southwest. A frontal
boundary dropping south and eastward through the region should
also help to enhance rainfall totals this weekend, with particular
concerns over areas that have been very wet as of late (northern
and central Rockies/western Great Plains). There was enough model
support for a "slight risk" on the day 4 Excessive Rainfall
Outlook from central/eastern Montana into western Nebraska
especially given high stream flows in that region. The dynamics
support at least locally heavy convection and possible complexes
farther south and east along the boundary into the south-central
Plains/Mississippi Valley, but there is still enough model
uncertainty over this region which has also been much drier to
preclude extending the "slight risk" that far east as early as day
4, but did seem reasonable to be added for Day 5 heading into the
Mid-South and vicinity given increasing support. Also for day 5, a
slight risk is depicted in eastern Colorado and far southeast
Wyoming mainly given the antecedent wetness and favorable
conditions. The WPC Hazards Outlook chart also shows an area
favorable for heavy rains into day 6 over the Great Lakes and the
East given a June upper low.
Farther into the central U.S. and the Ohio Valley, strong
thunderstorms should focus along the fairly progressive frontal
boundary and a marginal risk remains expanded into this region for
days 4 and 5 as models indicate the potential for at least locally
heavy rainfall. The Great Lakes closed upper trough/low
development and associated and wrapping surface low and frontal
characteristics trailing over the Appalachians/East/Southeast into
early next week may then set the stage for development of a
pattern favoring additional widespread threats for heavy
rain/thunderstorms to monitor. Ejecting energies out of the
Southwest also looks to favor additional rounds of rainfall and
convection again around mid-week next week for parts of the
south-central Plains.
Temperatures over the northern tier and back into the Pacific
Northwest should moderate some this weekend, but may creep back up
again early next week with anomalies generally +10-15F possible.
Underneath possible closed low development over the Great
Lakes/Midwest and back into the Southwest/California, temperatures
should trend cooler than normal. Upper ridging moving into parts
of the southern Plains early to middle of next week should allow
for warmer than average values there as well and an emerging
excessive heat threat for Texas and vicinity may linger as per CPC.
Schichtel/Santorelli
Hazards:
- Heavy rain across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Northern Plains, the Northern Rockies, the
Middle Mississippi Valley, and the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun 10.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Tennessee Valley, the Great Lakes, the
Central Rockies, the Middle Mississippi Valley, the Southern
Plains, and the Ohio Valley, Sun, Jun 11.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Great Lakes, the Mid-Atlantic,
the Northeast, and the Central Appalachians, Mon, Jun 12.
- Severe weather across portions of the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun
10.
- Flooding possible across portions of the Northern Plains.
- Flooding occurring or imminent across portions of the Northern
Rockies and the Northern Great Basin.
- Flooding likely across portions of the Central Rockies, the
Central Great Basin, the Northern Rockies, and the Northern Great
Basin.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Southern Plains, Wed, Jun
14.
Additional 3-7 Day Hazard information can be found on the WPC
medium range hazards outlook chart at:
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/threats/threats.php
WPC medium range 500mb heights, surface systems, weather grids,
quantitative precipitation, experimental excessive rainfall
outlook, winter weather outlook probabilities and heat indices are
at:
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/5dayfcst500_wbg.gif
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/5dayfcst_wbg_conus.gif
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/5km_grids/5km_gridsbody.html
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/day4-7.shtml
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/#page=ero
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/wwd/pwpf_d47/pwpf_medr.php?day=4
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/heat_index.shtml
Hawaii Extended Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
327 AM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
Valid 00Z Thu Jun 08 2023 - 00Z Thu Jun 15 2023
Trade winds should remain fairly weak the next day or so as a
front to the north of Hawaii slides eastward but trades look to
rebound some again by the weekend as high pressure expands north
of the state. Expect somewhat in an uptick in shower chances too
across the state. The surface high to the north should get pushed
eastward and become established and strengthen to the northeast of
Hawaii early next week. This allows for stronger (moderate to
breezy) trades and increased shower activity for mainly windward
facing regions. There remains good synoptic agreement on this
overall pattern, but there are some differences in the details. A
general model compromise between deterministic and ensemble mean
solutions should help smooth out any of these differences.
Santorelli




































» Extreme Precipitation Monitor
+ Additional Links
- » Product Verification
- » Product Archive
- » Product Info
- » Additional formats of QPF: GRIB 2 | Shapefiles | KML
- » Other QPF Products





+ Forecast Discussion
Excessive Rainfall Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
847 PM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
Day 1
Valid 01Z Thu Jun 08 2023 - 12Z Thu Jun 08 2023
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
0100Z Update...
Adjustments for this update included trimming the central High
Plains from the Slight Risk area. While some showers and
thunderstorms are expected to continue, producing isolated
concerns for flash flooding, especially across burn sensitive
areas -- recent hi-res guidance and satellite/radar trends do not
suggest a threat for organized storms, producing widespread heavy
rainfall beyond 01Z. For similar reasons, the Marginal Risk was
removed from South Florida as well. In the northern High Plains,
the Slight Risk was shifted farther northeast over eastern
Montana, where pooling moisture interacting with a slow-moving
shortwave is currently supporting the development of showers and
storms, with areas of heavy rainfall across the region. Guidance
suggests conditions will remain favorable for additional heavy
rainfall for at least a few more hours, The 18Z HREF indicates
additional amounts of 1-2 inches are likely, raising concerns for
flash flooding given the wet antecedent conditions. Elsewhere,
smaller adjustments were made based largely on current
radar/satellite trends and recent runs of the HRRR and the 18Z
HREF.
Previous Discussion...
...Southern Plains through the Northern Rockies...
Another day of scattered to widespread diurnal convection is
likely across much of the High Plains and Intermountain West as
the blocking synoptic pattern remains entrenched across the area.
An expansive ridge centered over the Northern Plains and an
anomalous closed low over the Great Basin will sandwich this area,
driving persistent moist advection from the Gulf of Mexico to push
PW anomalies to +2 to +3 standard deviations according to the
NAEFS ensemble tables. The corridor of highest PWs will be
collocated with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg, and lay beneath a
persistent upper deformation axis, to favorably produce aftn
thunderstorms today. Weak impulses embedded within the flow will
likely yield areas of greater coverage, but with minimal overall
bulk shear, storms should generally remain disorganized today,
which is echoed by the simulated reflectivity among the various
high-res members.
This suggests that the broad MRGL risk inherited from overnight
remains warranted as any of these storms could have rain rates
above 1"/hr atop soils that are saturated from 7-day rainfall of
300-600% resulting in anomalous streamflows. The only significant
adjustment to the MRGL risk area was to expand it east into the
western Hill Country and RGV of TX where guidance indicates an MCS
may develop tonight with heavy rain rates falling atop locally
more sensitive soils.
The inherited SLGT risks were adjusted only cosmetically as they
still highlight the two areas of greatest concern. The first, from
the Front Range of the Rockies south into the TX Panhandle is
driven primarily by the most saturated antecedent soils from
repeated days of heavy rainfall. This has lowered FFG to
1-1.5"/3hrs in many areas, which has a 20-30% of being exceeded
according to the HREF. While coverage/organization of convection
may not be overly impressive here, the high risk of runoff leading
to flash flooding persists due to the more compromised soils.
Additionally, for the smaller SLGT risk across WY/MT, this area is
more firmly embedded within the greatest PW anomalies, and FFG is
reduced even more to as low as 0.5"/3hrs due to recent heavy
rains. Any storms that move across this area could quickly produce
runoff to renew flash flooding.
...Northern Sierra/Northern California into portions of the Great
Basin...
The anomalous closed upper low over CA this morning will begin to
drift northward while slowly filling today. The total latitude and
height gain will be pretty minimal today however, so significant
forcing for showers and isolated thunderstorms is still expected
across northern CA and into the Great Basin. The most significant
adjustment today should be a reduction in coverage over central CA
which did experience heavy rain on Tuesday, so the MRGL risk has
been trimmed just slightly from the south. However, the overlap of
impressive PWs noted by NAEFS standardized anomalies reaching
above +2 sigma and MUCAPE as high as 1000 J/kg will still support
efficient rain rates reaching 1"/hr in the scattered slow moving
convection. Across the Northern Sierra and northern coastal
ranges, 24-hr rainfall has been more than 2 inches in some areas
according to MRMS, compounding already wet soils noted by high
USGS streamflow anomalies and elevated CPC soil moisture. The HREF
has a more aggressive signal today for more than 3 inches across
the Klamath Mountain as well, which, while still only 10-20%,
suggests a higher-end MRGL risk for runoff and isolated flash
flooding than the past few days.
...Northern Plains/Upper Midwest...
Stationary front positioned north-to-south across the Dakotas will
begin to weak today, but continue to provide an impetus for ascent
and scattered thunderstorms this aftn. The environment around the
front will be thermodynamically favorable for heavy rain noted by
PW anomalies around +2 sigma according to NAEFS ensemble tables
and a ribbon of MUCAPE reaching 2000 J/kg. This will fuel
convection with rain rates that could reach 2"/hr according to the
HREF probabilities. Storm motions will generally be around 10 kts,
but aligned to the front so some training is possible. Despite the
expected scattered nature of convection this aftn, training of
these rain rates could produce locally more than 3" of rain, which
will fall atop soils still primed noted by USGS streamflows that
are above the 90th percentile, especially in eastern ND.
The MRGL risk was extended into MN as well which, despite having
soils that can likely handle more rain, could also experience a
flash flood risk tonight. The high-res simulated reflectivity has
some consensus in developing an MCS type event late tonight along
a potent CAPE gradient and the elevated front to the east. This
could result in training 2"/hr rates, and the HREF has some higher
EAS probabilities for 2" tonight. Confidence is not extremely high
for this event, and it is possible some further adjustments to
this ERO area will be needed later today.
Pereira/Weiss
Day 1 threat area: www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.txt
Excessive Rainfall Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
418 PM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
Day 2
Valid 12Z Thu Jun 08 2023 - 12Z Fri Jun 09 2023
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
NORTHERN ROCKIES INTO THE INTERIOR PACIFIC NORTHWEST...
...Northern/Central Rockies into the Pacific Northwest...
Closed low over the Great Basin will open and fill Thursday and
then move slowly almost due north as its eastward progression gets
blocked by an amplified ridge over the Northern Plains. This
evolution will drive increasing height falls into the Northern
Rockies, with lobes of vorticity swinging through the trough
combining with intense mid-level divergence to drive robust
ascent. Moisture will increase significantly on Thursday as well
as persistent E/SE flow around this trough advects PWs as high as
1.25 inches, above the daily record according to SPC sounding
climatology and approaching +4 sigma according to NAEFS. This
exceptional PW will overlap with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg to
support intense rainfall in widespread convection on Thursday,
with rates likely eclipsing 1"/hr in many areas. 0-6km bulk shear
reaching 25-35 kts and southeast upslope flow will contribute
additionally to storm organization and intensity, and with this
rain falling atop soils pre-conditioned from 7-day rainfall as
much as 600% of normal (highest in MT), the flash flood risk is
increasing.
The inherited SLGT risk was expanded as far west as Spokane, WA,
and cosmetically adjusted for the new ensemble guidance. Despite
eastern WA and the stovepipe of ID having been dry recently as
reflected by AHPS rainfall data and below normal USGS streamflow,
these intense thermodynamics and resultant rainfall rates should
still produce rapid runoff and scattered flash flooding. However,
the higher threat, which is reflected by the CSU first guess
fields indicating a greater than 25% risk, is across north-central
MT where antecedent soils are more saturated and HREF exceedance
probabilities eclipse 50%.
...Sierra/Northern CA/Great Basin...
As the closed low opens and drifts northward, the overlap of
intense synoptic ascent and impressive thermodynamics will persist
one more day. Forcing provided by height falls and downstream
divergence will continue to impact the environment with PWs of
0.75-1 inch and MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg. This will again support
scattered diurnal convection, and HREF rain rate probabilities
reach as high as 25% for 1"/hr. While the coverage of convection
may be a bit less/more scattered than anticipated on D1, it will
be occurring across the same areas, suggesting the soils may be
more saturated, resulting in a faster onset of runoff. Additional
rainfall could reach 1-3" in some areas, which, especially if
occurring over the same areas as on Tuesday or Wednesday, could
yield rapid runoff and isolated flash flooding noted by 3-hr
exceedance probabilities peaking at 30%.
...South Florida...
The tail of an upper level jet streak centered over the Atlantic
will remain over the Florida Peninsula on Thursday, providing
another day of favorable ascent for scattered showers and
thunderstorms. Mid-level flow will become increasingly confluent
on Thursday as well the anomalous New England trough digs farther
south, within which subtle impulses will rotate over the region.
This ascent into PWs above 1.75 inches collocated with a ribbon of
2000 J/kg MUCAPE will fuel 2"/hr rain rates within the convective
activity. Storms that do develop are progged to move progressively
to the northeast on 20-25 kts of mean 0-6km winds, but aligned
Corfidi vectors and 25 kts of bulk shear indicate that training or
some multi-cell clusters are likely, which could enhance both the
rain rates and rain duration. The HREF probabilities for more than
3 inches of rain reach 40%, with the highest risk occurring atop
more saturated soils from 7-day rainfall that has been more than
200% of normal according to AHPS. While the greatest risk for any
isolated flash flooding appears to be along the urban Gold Coast
where the sea breeze pinning may occur, any place across South
Florida that experiences training could see instances of flash
flooding.
...Northern Plains/Upper Midwest...
A weakening stationary front will dissipate during Thursday ahead
of a secondary cold front approaching from Canada late in the
period. This forcing moving across a region of elevated PWs of +1
to +2 standard deviations according to NAEFS collocated with a
ribbon of MUCAPE reaching as high as 2000 J/kg will support
intense rain rates which at times may reach above 1"/hr according
to HREF probabilities. Although Corfidi vectors reach 20 kts, they
are aligned to the mean wind suggesting some training potential,
while bulk shear of nearly 30 kts indicate the potential for some
multi-cell clusters. These together could result in pockets of
heavier rainfall as repeated rounds of storms occur, with locally
3" possible. Overall the flash flood risk looks isolated, with the
MRGL risk tailored to the highest antecedent streamflows
suggesting a greater risk for rapid runoff but any heavy rain.
Weiss
Day 2 threat area: www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoints.txt
Excessive Rainfall Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
419 PM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
Day 3
Valid 12Z Fri Jun 09 2023 - 12Z Sat Jun 10 2023
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE INTERIOR
PACIFIC NORTHWEST THROUGH THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...Sierra through the Pacific Northwest and Northern Rockies...
Amplified but weakening mid-level trough, the remnants of the
closed low from CA Wednesday, will continue to lift
north/northwest as its eastward progression gets halted by a
strong ridge over the Northern High Plains. This feature will
continue to produce robust deep layer ascent through height falls
and divergence, with mid-level impulses rotating through the flow
contributing. Additionally, a modest jet streak on the NW side of
this trough will place favorable RRQ diffluence over the Northern
Rockies. This overlapped ascent will work upon an extremely moist
environment with PWs remaining as high as +4 standard deviations
near the Canadian border, while a plume of 1000+ MUCAPE advects
westward from the High Plains. This setup should result in
scattered to widespread heavy rainfall, which will occur on top of
soils that will be highly vulnerable to runoff after what is
expected to be even more expansive and intense rainfall during D2.
The inherited SLGT risk was expanded to the west to account for
the highest PW anomalies atop the forecast rainfall footprint from
D2. Although some uncertainty persists due to consideration of D2
rainfall, the SLGT risk expansion was coordinated with the local
WFOs and covers both the highest deterministic QPF and greatest,
albeit small, probabilities for an additional 3" of rain in the
ECENS/GEFS/SREF ensembles.
Farther to the south, another day of scattered slow moving showers
with isolated thunderstorms is forecast from the Sierra northward
through the northern Great Basin and into Oregon. Here, the
organization and duration of convection is expected to be less
than points northeast, but rainfall which the GFS indicates could
exceed 0.5" in 1 hr at times Friday will be occurring atop soils
that are likely saturated from rainfall earlier in the week, with
high streamflows still indicated by USGS. This could result in at
least isolated instances of runoff or flash flooding on Friday.
...Southern to Central High Plains...
Modest eight falls pushing across the Southern to Central Rockies
into the Southern to Central High Plains will occur Friday as a
shortwave traverses through the southern stream. These height
falls should strengthen the southerly flow across the region,
noted by increasing low level moisture transport through the
Southern Plains. While there is some uncertainty as to how this
will manifest as convection, there is at least some consensus that
a stripe of showers and thunderstorms will develop and push
eastward beneath this shortwave into the better moisture. Both the
GEFS and ECENS ensemble probabilities for more than 1" of rain are
spread broadly across the High Plains and into the Central Plains,
and while it is possible some heavier rain will occur the signal
is not sufficient at this time to highlight any specific region
above a MRGL risk. The inherited MRGL risk was trimmed from the
east to account for drier soils and lower streamflows, but
otherwise changes were negligible.
Weiss
Day 3 threat area: www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoints.txt
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
413 PM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
A daily risk for heavy showers and strong to severe thunderstorms
from the southern Plains through the northern Rockies and westward
into the Great Basin is expected to be slow to dislodge over about
the next week as tropical Pacific moisture remains funneled
northward between a strong central U.S. ridge and an upper
low/trough parked over California/the Southwest. A frontal
boundary dropping south and eastward through the region should
also help to enhance rainfall totals this weekend, with particular
concerns over areas that have been very wet as of late (northern
and central Rockies/western Great Plains). There was enough model
support for a "slight risk" on the day 4 Excessive Rainfall
Outlook from central/eastern Montana into western Nebraska
especially given high stream flows in that region. The dynamics
support at least locally heavy convection and possible complexes
farther south and east along the boundary into the south-central
Plains/Mississippi Valley, but there is still enough model
uncertainty over this region which has also been much drier to
preclude extending the "slight risk" that far east as early as day
4, but did seem reasonable to be added for Day 5 heading into the
Mid-South and vicinity given increasing support. Also for day 5, a
slight risk is depicted in eastern Colorado and far southeast
Wyoming mainly given the antecedent wetness and favorable
conditions. The WPC Hazards Outlook chart also shows an area
favorable for heavy rains into day 6 over the Great Lakes and the
East given a June upper low.
Farther into the central U.S. and the Ohio Valley, strong
thunderstorms should focus along the fairly progressive frontal
boundary and a marginal risk remains expanded into this region for
days 4 and 5 as models indicate the potential for at least locally
heavy rainfall. The Great Lakes closed upper trough/low
development and associated and wrapping surface low and frontal
characteristics trailing over the Appalachians/East/Southeast into
early next week may then set the stage for development of a
pattern favoring additional widespread threats for heavy
rain/thunderstorms to monitor. Ejecting energies out of the
Southwest also looks to favor additional rounds of rainfall and
convection again around mid-week next week for parts of the
south-central Plains.
Temperatures over the northern tier and back into the Pacific
Northwest should moderate some this weekend, but may creep back up
again early next week with anomalies generally +10-15F possible.
Underneath possible closed low development over the Great
Lakes/Midwest and back into the Southwest/California, temperatures
should trend cooler than normal. Upper ridging moving into parts
of the southern Plains early to middle of next week should allow
for warmer than average values there as well and an emerging
excessive heat threat for Texas and vicinity may linger as per CPC.
Schichtel/Santorelli
Hazards:
- Heavy rain across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Northern Plains, the Northern Rockies, the
Middle Mississippi Valley, and the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun 10.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Tennessee Valley, the Great Lakes, the
Central Rockies, the Middle Mississippi Valley, the Southern
Plains, and the Ohio Valley, Sun, Jun 11.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Great Lakes, the Mid-Atlantic,
the Northeast, and the Central Appalachians, Mon, Jun 12.
- Severe weather across portions of the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun
10.
- Flooding possible across portions of the Northern Plains.
- Flooding occurring or imminent across portions of the Northern
Rockies and the Northern Great Basin.
- Flooding likely across portions of the Central Rockies, the
Central Great Basin, the Northern Rockies, and the Northern Great
Basin.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Southern Plains, Wed, Jun
14.
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
413 PM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
A daily risk for heavy showers and strong to severe thunderstorms
from the southern Plains through the northern Rockies and westward
into the Great Basin is expected to be slow to dislodge over about
the next week as tropical Pacific moisture remains funneled
northward between a strong central U.S. ridge and an upper
low/trough parked over California/the Southwest. A frontal
boundary dropping south and eastward through the region should
also help to enhance rainfall totals this weekend, with particular
concerns over areas that have been very wet as of late (northern
and central Rockies/western Great Plains). There was enough model
support for a "slight risk" on the day 4 Excessive Rainfall
Outlook from central/eastern Montana into western Nebraska
especially given high stream flows in that region. The dynamics
support at least locally heavy convection and possible complexes
farther south and east along the boundary into the south-central
Plains/Mississippi Valley, but there is still enough model
uncertainty over this region which has also been much drier to
preclude extending the "slight risk" that far east as early as day
4, but did seem reasonable to be added for Day 5 heading into the
Mid-South and vicinity given increasing support. Also for day 5, a
slight risk is depicted in eastern Colorado and far southeast
Wyoming mainly given the antecedent wetness and favorable
conditions. The WPC Hazards Outlook chart also shows an area
favorable for heavy rains into day 6 over the Great Lakes and the
East given a June upper low.
Farther into the central U.S. and the Ohio Valley, strong
thunderstorms should focus along the fairly progressive frontal
boundary and a marginal risk remains expanded into this region for
days 4 and 5 as models indicate the potential for at least locally
heavy rainfall. The Great Lakes closed upper trough/low
development and associated and wrapping surface low and frontal
characteristics trailing over the Appalachians/East/Southeast into
early next week may then set the stage for development of a
pattern favoring additional widespread threats for heavy
rain/thunderstorms to monitor. Ejecting energies out of the
Southwest also looks to favor additional rounds of rainfall and
convection again around mid-week next week for parts of the
south-central Plains.
Temperatures over the northern tier and back into the Pacific
Northwest should moderate some this weekend, but may creep back up
again early next week with anomalies generally +10-15F possible.
Underneath possible closed low development over the Great
Lakes/Midwest and back into the Southwest/California, temperatures
should trend cooler than normal. Upper ridging moving into parts
of the southern Plains early to middle of next week should allow
for warmer than average values there as well and an emerging
excessive heat threat for Texas and vicinity may linger as per CPC.
Schichtel/Santorelli
Hazards:
- Heavy rain across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Northern Plains, the Northern Rockies, the
Middle Mississippi Valley, and the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun 10.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Tennessee Valley, the Great Lakes, the
Central Rockies, the Middle Mississippi Valley, the Southern
Plains, and the Ohio Valley, Sun, Jun 11.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Great Lakes, the Mid-Atlantic,
the Northeast, and the Central Appalachians, Mon, Jun 12.
- Severe weather across portions of the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun
10.
- Flooding possible across portions of the Northern Plains.
- Flooding occurring or imminent across portions of the Northern
Rockies and the Northern Great Basin.
- Flooding likely across portions of the Central Rockies, the
Central Great Basin, the Northern Rockies, and the Northern Great
Basin.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Southern Plains, Wed, Jun
14.







» Interactive Winter Weather Map (Day 4-7)
» Winter Storm Severity Index
+ Forecast Discussion (Day 1-3)
Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
1106 AM EDT Thu May 11 2023
Valid 00Z Fri May 12 2023 - 00Z Mon May 15 2023
*** The Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion will next
update on or about October 1, 2023 unless a significant snow
threat is forecast. ***
- » Experimental Winter Storm Outlook
- » Experimental Probabilistic Winter Storm Severity Index
- » Product Verification
- » Product Archive
- » Product Info
- » Forecast Surface Low Positions: Uncertainty Circles | Ensemble Clusters
- » Other Winter Weather Products





NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
413 PM EDT Wed Jun 07 2023
Valid 12Z Sat Jun 10 2023 - 12Z Wed Jun 14 2023
...A multi-day thunderstorm and local heavy rain threat will
continue into early next week from a very saturated Northern
Rockies through portions of the Great Plains...
...Heavy rain/strong thunderstorm threat from the
Midwest/Mid-South to the East this weekend into early next week
with closed low genesis...
...Texas/Vicinity Excessive Heat threat by next midweek may linger
as per the Climate Prediction Center...
...Overview...
A quite blocky flow pattern looks to persist through at least
early next week as an anomalously strong upper ridge/high remains
sandwiched between mean troughing/closed lows over the Southwest
and the Northeast. This pattern continues to support diurnal
showers and storms, some locally heavy, from the southern Plains
through the northern Rockies and parts of the Great Basin. The
next wave rounding the mid-continental ridge crosses Ontario and
approaches the Northeast this weekend, with growing consensus on
closing off a low over the Upper Great Lakes around Monday-Tuesday
next week. This would prompt an additional and locally enhanced
precipitation focus by the weekend into early next week out across
the east-central U.S. and then the Eastern Seaboard.
...Guidance Evaluation/Predictability Assessment...
There remains good agreement on the weather pattern across the
CONUS through early next week, again bolstering forecast
confidence. The WPC product suite valid for the first half of the
period (Saturday into Monday) was based on a composite blend of
the latest deterministic model solutions from the
GFS/ECMWF/UKMET/Canadian and the National Blend of Models. Even
into days 6 and 7 (Tuesday and Wednesday) though, models seem to
be similarly trending towards a fairly strong closed low over the
Great Lakes, with some weakening/opening up as it pushes into the
Northeast. Prefer a model and ensemble blend at these longer time
frames, but did slant the forecast in the direction of recent
Canadian runs that offer a slightly more amplified and less
progressive solution given nature of the blocky flow and any far
downstream affects from the expected emergence of Typhoon Guchul
into the Pacific westerlies next week. In this pattern out West,
the models agree in the idea that the closed low over
California/the Southwest should slowly split/open up and shift
east and possibly finally break down the blocky pattern. Plenty of
uncertainty and trends left to monitor though. This maintains good
continuity with the previous WPC progs as well.
...Weather/Hazards Highlights...
A daily risk for heavy showers and strong to severe thunderstorms
from the southern Plains through the northern Rockies and westward
into the Great Basin is expected to be slow to dislodge over about
the next week as tropical Pacific moisture remains funneled
northward between a strong central U.S. ridge and an upper
low/trough parked over California/the Southwest. A frontal
boundary dropping south and eastward through the region should
also help to enhance rainfall totals this weekend, with particular
concerns over areas that have been very wet as of late (northern
and central Rockies/western Great Plains). There was enough model
support for a "slight risk" on the day 4 Excessive Rainfall
Outlook from central/eastern Montana into western Nebraska
especially given high stream flows in that region. The dynamics
support at least locally heavy convection and possible complexes
farther south and east along the boundary into the south-central
Plains/Mississippi Valley, but there is still enough model
uncertainty over this region which has also been much drier to
preclude extending the "slight risk" that far east as early as day
4, but did seem reasonable to be added for Day 5 heading into the
Mid-South and vicinity given increasing support. Also for day 5, a
slight risk is depicted in eastern Colorado and far southeast
Wyoming mainly given the antecedent wetness and favorable
conditions. The WPC Hazards Outlook chart also shows an area
favorable for heavy rains into day 6 over the Great Lakes and the
East given a June upper low.
Farther into the central U.S. and the Ohio Valley, strong
thunderstorms should focus along the fairly progressive frontal
boundary and a marginal risk remains expanded into this region for
days 4 and 5 as models indicate the potential for at least locally
heavy rainfall. The Great Lakes closed upper trough/low
development and associated and wrapping surface low and frontal
characteristics trailing over the Appalachians/East/Southeast into
early next week may then set the stage for development of a
pattern favoring additional widespread threats for heavy
rain/thunderstorms to monitor. Ejecting energies out of the
Southwest also looks to favor additional rounds of rainfall and
convection again around mid-week next week for parts of the
south-central Plains.
Temperatures over the northern tier and back into the Pacific
Northwest should moderate some this weekend, but may creep back up
again early next week with anomalies generally +10-15F possible.
Underneath possible closed low development over the Great
Lakes/Midwest and back into the Southwest/California, temperatures
should trend cooler than normal. Upper ridging moving into parts
of the southern Plains early to middle of next week should allow
for warmer than average values there as well and an emerging
excessive heat threat for Texas and vicinity may linger as per CPC.
Schichtel/Santorelli
Hazards:
- Heavy rain across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Northern Plains, the Northern Rockies, the
Middle Mississippi Valley, and the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun 10.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Tennessee Valley, the Great Lakes, the
Central Rockies, the Middle Mississippi Valley, the Southern
Plains, and the Ohio Valley, Sun, Jun 11.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Great Lakes, the Mid-Atlantic,
the Northeast, and the Central Appalachians, Mon, Jun 12.
- Severe weather across portions of the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun
10.
- Flooding possible across portions of the Northern Plains.
- Flooding occurring or imminent across portions of the Northern
Rockies and the Northern Great Basin.
- Flooding likely across portions of the Central Rockies, the
Central Great Basin, the Northern Rockies, and the Northern Great
Basin.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Southern Plains, Wed, Jun
14.
Additional 3-7 Day Hazard information can be found on the WPC
medium range hazards outlook chart at:
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/threats/threats.php
WPC medium range 500mb heights, surface systems, weather grids,
quantitative precipitation, experimental excessive rainfall
outlook, winter weather outlook probabilities and heat indices are
at:
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/5dayfcst500_wbg.gif
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/5dayfcst_wbg_conus.gif
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/5km_grids/5km_gridsbody.html
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/day4-7.shtml
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/#page=ero
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/wwd/pwpf_d47/pwpf_medr.php?day=4
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/heat_index.shtml
Displays flood and flash flood reports as well as intense rainfall observations for user-selectable time ranges and customizable geographic regions. Includes ability to download reports and associated metadata in csv format.

Plots of GEFS probabilistic forecast of precipitation, temperature, and sea-level pressure exceeding various thresholds.

Custom plots of Local Storm Reports across the Contiguous United States. Reports include rain, snow, ice, and severe weather, as well as other significant information from storm spotters.

Displays the climatological significance of precipitation forecast by WPC. The climatological significance is represented by Average Recurrence Intervals (ARIs) of precipitation estimates from NOAA Atlas-14 and Atlas2.

An interactive situational awareness table that displays anomalies, percentiles, and return intervals from the GEFS, NAEFS, and ECMWF Ensembles (login required to view ECMWF data).
*Please note that there is currently an issue where only users on a NOAA network can access this page. We are actively working to resolve this problem.

Interactive display of where temperatures could approach or exceed records within the contiguous U.S. (based on NDFD temperature forecasts)

Displays Days 1-7 NDFD maximum and minimum temperatures, along with their respective departures from climatology.

An interactive tool that depicts areas of heavy snowfall from individual members of high-resolution short range ensemble forecasts.
Displays forecast information and its climatological context to quickly alert a forecaster when a record or neear-record breaking event is possible. This tool is available for both CONUS and Alaska.

Interface for specialized WPC Excessive Rainfall Outlook Maps for NWS County Warning Areas and States.

Analog guidance that uses an objective approach to find historical events that are similar to the upcoming forecast.

Nationally consistent and skillful suite of calibrated forecast guidance based on a blend of both NWS and non-NWS numerical weather prediction model data and post-processed model guidance.

A portal for atmospheric river forecasts and diagnostics from the GEFS.

An interactive display of time series plots from GEFS ensemble members at a point.

A variety of useful tools generated at The Storm Prediction Center (SPC).

Output from the ECMWF 'Ensemble Prediction System' (ENS) for four parameters: mean sea level pressure, 850 hPa temperature, 850 hPa wind speed, and 500 hPa geopotential height.