987
FXUS64 KMEG 050420
AFDMEG

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Memphis TN
1120 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

...New AVIATION...

.KEY MESSAGES...
Updated at 1111 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

- An unsettled weather pattern will return Thursday and continue
  through the weekend with multiple rounds of showers and
  thunderstorms. Some could be strong to severe with locally
  heavy rain.

- Temperatures will cool slightly behind a front this weekend.
  Highs will drop into the low 80s for portions of the area
  Saturday and Sunday.

&&

.UPDATE...
Issued at 841 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

A nearly stationary front stretches from the Arklatex into the
Mid MS Valley this evening. Moisture advecting northward on the
east side of the boundary combined with some weak lift from upper
level disturbances moving through the WSW aloft has resulted in
scattered SHRAs and isolated TSRAs across NE AR and the MO
Bootheel. MLCAPEs of 1500-2000 J/kg tempered by weak shear and
marginal lapse rates will result in isolated TSRA threat
continuing west of the MS River, mostly north of I-40, through
tonight. Ongoing forecast handles this well.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
(This evening through next Tuesday)
Issued at 220 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

220 PM radar imagery depicts a few showers and thunderstorms
stretching from northern Arkansas into southeast Missouri. While
this activity will largely stay out of the Mid-South, downstream
development will be possible mainly over the Missouri Bootheel and
northeast Arkansas through the evening. Luckily, our environment
remains lack luster for severe weather, so the primary concerns
with these storms will be heavy rainfall and strong winds up to 40
mph. This activity will dissipate around sunset, allowing another
warm and dry night with lows in the upper 60s to lower 70s.

Unfortunately, rain chances will plague the Mid-South through the
remainder of the forecast period. Beginning late tonight, upper
level ridging will slide over Texas and place the Mid-South in
zonal flow aloft. Over the next several days, multiple
disturbances will rotate around the outer periphery of this ridge.
This will set the stage for multiple rounds of severe weather -
beginning tomorrow.

Isolated thunderstorms will develop Thursday afternoon, mainly
impacting areas along and north of the TN/MS border. As is typical
with a summertime pattern, CAPE will be plentiful. The main caveat
to upscale storm growth Thursday afternoon lies within relatively
weak bulk shear. High-res models depict this shear slightly
increasing in the late afternoon, which would yield a damaging
wind and large hail threat. Regardless, it appears the threat for
severe weather on Thursday will be confined to the afternoon and
evening hours.

Greater model disagreement manifests for Friday and Saturday due
to the potential for multiple MCS passages. The ECMWF depicts an
ongoing MCS Friday morning. However, confidence in this occurring
is low due to spread within lapse rates and CIN values Thursday
night into Friday. The greater potential for severe storm
development begins Friday afternoon, when severe parameters max-
out. Another MCS is possible in this time frame, posing a damaging
wind and large hail threat. As such, the Storm Prediction Center
has the Mid-South outlooked in a Slight Risk (level 2/5) for
severe storms Friday. A rinse and repeat forecast exists for
Saturday as yet another round of storms impacts the Mid-South. A
Slight Risk (level 2 of 5) for severe storms also exists on
Saturday, mainly along and south of I-40.

Rain chances will continue through the weekend before a weak front
crosses the area on Sunday. The Mid-South may see a brief lull in
precipitation activity early next week, but by midweek rain
chances return.

ANS

&&

.AVIATION...
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 1120 PM CDT Wed Jun 4 2025

VFR conditions will prevail across JBR/MEM/MKL with
MVFR conditions at TUP overnight and into the afternoon hours. The
biggest impact this issuance will remain timing and intensity of
convection. Subsequent model runs have begun to somewhat align
with timing and intensity of convection tomorrow, though
confidence remains on the lower end. Due to uncertainty, as we
sit ahead of a stationary boundary, PROB30s at JBR/TUP looked to
be the best way to handle convection with TEMPOs at MEM/MKL.
South/southwest winds sub 10 kts will continue over the next 30 or
so hours.

AEH

&&

.MEG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
AR...None.
MO...None.
MS...None.
TN...None.
&&

$$

PUBLIC FORECAST...SJM
AVIATION...AEH