756
FXUS64 KTSA 050201
AFDTSA

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Tulsa OK
901 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

...New UPDATE...

.KEY MESSAGES...
Issued at 900 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

  - An active weather pattern that favors mainly nighttime into
    early morning strong to severe storm complexes is expected
    beginning Thursday night and ending Sunday morning.

  - Multiple rounds of rainfall will lead to an increasing flash
    and main-stem river flooding threat.

  - A change in the weather pattern is expected by early next
    week. A cold front will bring a chance for storms Sunday into
    Monday. Odds favor below average temps for this time of year.

&&

.UPDATE...
Issued at 900 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

The current forecast is trending well this evening and no
significant changes were required at this time. Isolated showers/
drizzle continue along a stalled frontal boundary in far eastern
Oklahoma and northwest Arkansas. While rainfall will be spotty,
precip may continue overnight with modest LLJ. Will keep slight
chance PoPs in place here for much of the night, though activity
should shift east with time. Short term guidance continues to
suggest fog development overnight, perhaps locally dense, mainly
across far northeastern Oklahoma and northwest Arkansas.
Otherwise, a quiet night is in store and the previous discussion
remains valid.

&&

.SHORT TERM...
(Tonight and Thursday)
Issued at 233 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

Early afternoon surface analysis and satellite data shows a
quasi-stationary front hung up in the terrain of far E OK and NW
AR. CAMs show some potential for scattered showers and storms
mainly on the eastern fringes of the Tulsa NWS area of
responsibility this afternoon and early evening. Even if storms
develop, deep layer shear is weak so storms will have a hard time
organizing with wet microbursts the most likely threat. The
overall severe threat is pretty small. The remainder of the night
is expected to be fairly quiet as any storm activity coming off
the High Plains should remain well to the west. Some fog was added
to the grids for late tonight into Thursday morning per latest
short-term guidance. The latest CAMs also suggest that the bulk of
the day Thursday will be quiet also, as any activity coming in
from the west is expected to dissipate in the slowly modifying but
still relatively cooler airmass in place over the region.

Lacy

&&

.LONG TERM...
(Thursday night through Wednesday)
Issued at 233 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

The combination of an ejecting PV max from the southwest CONUS, a
building mid-level ridge over Deep South TX and persistent
troughing over the north-central CONUS will cause mid-level
westerly flow to strengthen over the forecast area Thursday, and
this flow will remain strong thru Saturday. A multi-night stretch
of strong to severe MCS potential begins Thursday night as storms
organize off the High Plains and come east to southeast across
OK and eventually into W AR. The complexes will likely not take
the same track each time, probably trending southward each time,
but any overlap could bring multiple rounds of heavy rainfall on
the same areas, increasing the flash flood threat. EPS ensemble
mean QPF values aren`t super high (1.5" to 2.5") thru Sunday
morning, suggesting the possibility that the heavier rains from
the complexes may get distributed over more of the area. That
said, a widespread multi inch rain over the region will increase
the potential for main-stem river flooding.

The upper flow pattern is expected to change by early next week,
as a broad upper trough is expected to dig south over the Upper
Midwest and Great Lakes from Canada. This will force a cold front
south down the Plains with another associated chance of showers
and storms Sunday into Monday. The latest EC has things drying out
by Tuesday behind the front, with temps near or slightly below
average for this time of year.

Lacy

&&

.AVIATION...
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 645 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

MVFR to IFR conditions will generally prevail through the forecast
period. Some fog will also likely develop late tonight into
Thursday morning. Ceilings will gradually rise by Thursday
afternoon, and VFR conditions may return to some places at that
time, with KFSM most likely to see ceilings increase to VFR.

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
TUL   65  81  69  83 /  10  10  60  70
FSM   71  87  71  88 /  20  10  20  60
MLC   66  83  71  88 /  10  10  30  50
BVO   63  80  67  83 /  10  10  70  70
FYV   67  84  68  82 /  20  10  30  70
BYV   67  82  67  80 /  40  10  30  70
MKO   65  81  68  83 /  10  10  40  70
MIO   64  80  67  81 /  10  10  60  80
F10   65  81  68  84 /  10  10  50  60
HHW   69  84  71  88 /  10  10  10  20

&&

.TSA WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OK...None.
AR...None.
&&

$$

SHORT TERM...30
LONG TERM....30
AVIATION...05