Extended Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
300 PM EDT Wed Jun 15 2022
Valid 12Z Sat Jun 18 2022 - 12Z Wed Jun 22 2022
...Heat over the northern/central Plains through the weekend
likely to shift into the Midwest through Southeast next week...
...Overview...
A very amplified upper pattern will be in place during the
weekend, featuring a strong central U.S. ridge between troughs
near the western and eastern coasts. Then flow should steadily
trend toward a more typical summertime regime by next Wednesday
when the main axis of westerlies will likely align across the
northern tier while broad ridging (anchored by a high near the
Lower Mississippi Valley) would cover a large part of the southern
half of the lower 48. Widespread hot temperatures will prevail
underneath the ridge, with highs reaching 100F as far north as the
Dakotas during the weekend followed by the most anomalous high
temperatures shifting more into the Midwest through Southeast
during the early/middle part of next week. The amplified flow
regime in place through the weekend should promote an early
monsoon type pattern over the Four Corners states along with
moisture and rain chances in the Northwest. Farther east, there
will be potential for rain ahead of a warm front advancing into
the Great Lakes/Northeast and scattered diurnal showers and storms
across Florida.
...Guidance/Predictability Evaluation...
The latest models and ensemble means maintain good agreement for
the large scale pattern evolution through the period. Solutions
develop typical spread for the upper high center (around or
stronger than 594dm) expected to settle over or near the Lower
Mississippi Valley by the middle of next week, and continue to
vary with some of the details and timing of western U.S. upper
trough/low energy ejecting into southern Canada. The 00Z UKMET was
particularly fast with at least the northern concentration of
energy into central Canada and thus fast/east with an associated
surface low there, though over the U.S. with the southern energy
looked reasonable. Another weaker round of energy will keep a
probably low amplitude mean trough along the West Coast, with CMC
runs generally the strongest solutions. Within the trough near the
East Coast, there is still some indecision as to the timing of the
formation and the location of an embedded upper low which is most
likely to be over or north/northeast of Maine during the first
half of the period. Latest trends suggest that the upper trough
could depart from the Northeast a little more quickly in response
to the flatter flow upstream. The array of guidance generally
favored an intermediate/consensus approach for the updated
forecast, by way of a 12Z/18Z operational model blend with most
emphasis on the ECMWF and GFS runs transitioning to a model/mean
mix by the latter half of the period. The resulting forecast
provided reasonable continuity.
...Sensible Weather/Threat Highlights...
The upper trough pushing inland over the West after early Saturday
should bring light to locally moderate rainfall to parts of the
Northwest. Precipitation extending into the northern Rockies
during the weekend and perhaps into Monday (snow likely limited to
highest elevations) could be locally heavy given the strong
dynamics and available moisture crossing the region. It will take
some additional time to resolve important details of the upper
level system which will help to refine the forecast, which
currently shows spread between a typical rain event and potential
for heavy rain causing flooding in parts of the Northwest. The
unusually early monsoon type pattern farther south will bring much
above normal moisture for the time of year northward through the
Four Corners states and vicinity through the weekend, supporting
an increase in coverage and intensity of rainfall across the
region. Rain/thunderstorms should continue into early next week as
the moisture interacts with the front slowly advancing through the
West, though with activity tending to decrease in the northwestern
part of the Four Corners region. Currently there are mixed signals
over how much rainfall the interaction of this moisture with the
western front advancing into the Plains will produce. Farther
east, the East Coast/western Atlantic upper trough and possible
embedded low may bring a few showers to New England over the
weekend. Then an area of showers and thunderstorms may push across
the Great Lakes and possibly into the Northeast under
northwesterly flow aloft and ahead of an advancing warm front. The
Gulf Coast should see a diminishing of diurnally favored showers
and thunderstorms into the weekend while the Florida Peninsula
should see multiple days of diurnal showers/storms from the
weekend into next week as the front pushing into the Southeast
stalls.
The most anomalous temperatures during the period will be with a
heat wave across the northern half of the Plains, with most areas
seeing a couple days with highs reaching 20-25F above normal this
weekend. This heat may pivot around the central portions of the
Plains where plus 10-20F anomalies may persist into early next
week. Some daily records for highs and warm lows will be possible,
with even some potential for a few monthly records for warm lows,
given that lows in the upper 70s are forecast in portions of the
north-central U.S. A front moving into the Plains should start a
modest cooling trend/eastward shift of the heat early next week.
As the heat extends into the Midwest through Southeast during
Monday-Wednesday, plus 10-15F or so anomalies for highs should
become common and may challenge daily record highs/warm lows.
Before next week's warmer trend over the East, the northern half
of the region will see highs 5-10F or so below normal this
weekend. Also during the weekend, the upper trough crossing the
West will bring the region a couple days of highs up to 10-15F
below normal. More moderate cool temperatures will prevail over
the West on Monday followed by areas of somewhat above or below
readings.
Tate/Rausch
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
Hazards:
- Heavy rain across portions of the Northern Plains, the Northern
Rockies, and the Northern Great Basin, Sun-Mon, Jun 19-Jun 20.
- Heavy rain across portions of the Southern Rockies, the Central
Rockies, the Central Great Basin, and the Southwest, Sat-Mon, Jun
18-Jun 20.
- Flooding possible across portions of the Middle Mississippi
Valley and the Northern Plains.
- Flooding occurring or imminent across portions of the Upper
Mississippi Valley, the Pacific Northwest, the Northern Rockies,
the Northern Great Basin, and the Northern Plains.
- Flooding likely across portions of the Northern Plains and the
Northern Rockies.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Southeast, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, and the Southern Plains, Sat, Jun 18 and
Mon-Wed, Jun 20-Jun 22.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Central Plains, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Central Appalachians, the Tennessee
Valley, the Great Lakes, the Middle Mississippi Valley, the
Mid-Atlantic, the Southern Appalachians, the Upper Mississippi
Valley, the Southeast, the Southern Plains, and the Ohio Valley,
Mon-Wed, Jun 20-Jun 22.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Central Plains, the Middle
Mississippi Valley, the Lower Mississippi Valley, and the Southern
Plains, Sat-Wed, Jun 18-Jun 22.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Northern Plains, Sat, Jun
18.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Central Plains, the Middle
Mississippi Valley, the Great Lakes, the Upper Mississippi Valley,
and the Northern Plains, Sat-Mon, Jun 18-Jun 20.
- Excessive heat across portions of the Southern Appalachians, the
Mid-Atlantic, the Central Appalachians, and the Ohio Valley,
Tue-Wed, Jun 21-Jun 22.
- High winds across portions of the Central Great Basin,
California, the Northern Great Basin, and the Southwest, Sat, Jun
18.
- Enhanced wildfire risk across portions of the Central Great
Basin and the Southwest, Sat, Jun 18.
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