Forecast Discussion


619
FXUS64 KMEG 030029
AFDMEG

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Memphis TN
729 PM CDT Thu Apr 2 2026

...New UPDATE, AVIATION...

.KEY MESSAGES...
Issued at 729 PM CDT Thu Apr 2 2026

- A low chance for severe weather exists this evening. The
  strongest storms will be capable of localized gusty winds.

- There is a marginal risk for severe thunderstorms on Saturday
  afternoon and evening, mainly across north Mississippi. Damaging
  wind is the primary hazard.

- Abnormally warm temperatures (around 15 degrees above normal)
  will continue through Friday, with higher rain chances arriving
  Friday into Saturday with a cold front. Temperatures will edge
  slightly below normal for early next week, behind this front.

&&

.UPDATE...
Issued at 729 PM CDT Thu Apr 2 2026

Wind speeds have diminished this evening across the Mid-South,
allowing the Wind Advisory and Blowing Dust Advisories to be
dropped a bit ahead of schedule. Scattered diurnal showers and
thunderstorms continue across the western two-thirds of the CWA,
with a few storms exhibiting transient supercellular
characteristics. Damaging wind remains a minor concern with the
strongest cells, but widespread severe weather is not
anticipated. The 5% damaging wind probability is likely the
ceiling for this evening. CAMs indicate scattered convection will
persist through much of the overnight period, especially
along/north of I-40. 20-30% PoPs were expanded in area overnight,
with some higher pockets in the northern zones.

MJ

&&

.DISCUSSION...
(This evening through next Wednesday)
Issued at 1244 PM CDT Thu Apr 2 2026

Windy conditions can be found across the Mid-South at this hour
as the pressure gradient remains tight ahead of an approaching
cold front. Areas along and west of the Mississippi River, which
are in closest proximity to the front and its parent low pressure
system, are under a Wind Advisory until 8 PM. Sustained southerly
winds between 20-30 mph and gusts between 35-45 mph are likely to
occur. Elsewhere across the region, windy conditions around
20 mph sustained and gusts up to 35 mph are expected.

Aside from strong gradient winds, there is a low confidence
chance of strong to severe thunderstorms this afternoon into
evening. Model composite reflectivity`s have not been overly
excited amongst the development later on with isolated coverage
overall. The driving force of the Slight and Marginal Risks for
severe thunderstorms appears to be steep low level lapse rates
around 8C/km. Modest effective bulk shear between 30-40kts
appears probable, with values closer to 40 kts in extreme
northeast Arkansas and the Missouri Bootheel. Soundings, however,
are not favoring a backing wind profile, displaying high LCLs,
and mid level lapse rates around 5-6C/km. The aforementioned
front is likely to slow down, potentially stall once more, as it
enters western Arkansas. As the convection gets away from the
front, a few discrete cells will reach the Mid-South this
afternoon. These discrete cells` primary threat is damaging winds
as they are likely to be surface based. The discrete cells may
evolve and become supercellular in nature which also threatens
large hail and a tornado. Given the generally un-impressive
environmental factors, confidence remains low in the severe
weather setup tonight. Climatologically, however, April is the
peak severe weather season across the Mid-South and has
historically been able to prove the models wrong. This will
definitely be something to keep an eye on once, if at all, storms
begin to initiate.

Friday morning will be mostly dry and warm with highs in the 80s.
Throughout the day, shower and thunderstorm chances will be on
the rise as the cold front begins to dive southeasterly. There is
a low (less than 30%) chance of light showers and thunderstorms
developing as early as Friday afternoon, but after sunset on
Friday into the overnight period is the most likely timing for
beneficial rainfall to begin. While we will have better forcing
providing lift supportive of upscale growth, the timing of the
frontal crossing will not have the aid of daytime heating
providing additional instability. Uncommon for April, CAPE
parameters are less than 1000 J/kg. Perhaps up to 750 J/kg could
develop across northeast Mississippi, but less energy (around
500 J/kg or less) can be found elsewhere. There is only a low
(less than 30%) of joint probabilities of MUCAPE >500 J/kg and
>30 kts of bulk shear on Friday night into Saturday.

Once the front clears the area by Sunday morning, cooler and
drier air will filter in with highs generally in the 60s.
Seasonal trends will return with cool mornings with lows in the
upper 30s and 40s and warming into the 60s for the afternoons.
Benign weather is likely to persist through the workweek under
surface high pressure and weak northwest flow aloft. The GFS and
Canadian models are hinting at a weak surge of moisture for
Tuesday morning near the Bootheel that could introduce some low
PoPs, but given the very dry column of air that the ECMWF seems
to be catching onto, those two results seem unlikely. If the
solution of the ECMWF holds true, early Sunday will be our last
chance of rainfall through the forecast period as the
aforementioned cold front moves away from the region. Total
rainfall with the front is generally 1.00-1.50" of rain with
locally higher amounts up to 2.00" from today through Sunday.
While this will provide brief aid in drought conditions across
the area, the lack of beneficial rainfall is not looking good for
drought across the region.

DNM

&&

.AVIATION...
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 729 PM CDT Thu Apr 2 2026

Winds will remain elevated tonight at MEM, MKL, and JBR. LLWS is
expected to develop later this evening as 2 kft winds increase up
to around 40 kts, producing compression issues at MEM. The
mention of PROB30s for -SHRA tonight is being maintained as CAMs
still indicate scattered development occurring into early Friday
morning. Latest guidance shows medium to high confidence for MVFR
ceilings developing at all sites towards sunrise Friday with the
exception of TUP. VFR conditions are expected to return by Friday
afternoon.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...
Issued at 1244 PM CDT Thu Apr 2 2026

While windy conditions are expected today, RH values remain well
into the 60-70% range through Sunday morning. A cold front will
impede on the region Friday night bringing shower and
thunderstorm chances areawide through early Sunday morning.
Cooler and much drier air will begin to filter in Sunday with RH
values dipping between 35-45% by Sunday afternoon. As the dry air
continues to sink to the surface, there is a low to medium chance
on Monday and Tuesday for values to drop below 30%.

&&


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

$$

UPDATE...MJ
PUBLIC FORECAST...DNM
AVIATION...CJC