FOUS30 KWBC 030803 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 403 AM EDT Fri Apr 3 2026 Day 1 Valid 12Z Fri Apr 03 2026 - 12Z Sat Apr 04 2026 ...THERE IS SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE OZARKS, MISSOURI VALLEY, AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... At the mid-levels, a stout wave over the Intermountain West (centered over Wyoming) will migrate eastward throughout the day, spreading increasingly strong mid-level flow and height falls from the High Plains eastward toward the Mid/Upper Mississippi Valley. At the surface, strong 850mb flow and poleward flux of moisture/instability will become established along and ahead of a low initially across the Kansas/Nebraska border region at the beginning of the forecast period and persist through 12Z Sat. Late in the forecast period, a cold front will migrate southward across the southern Plains. Areas of scattered thunderstorms are expected along and ahead the front and low especially during the afternoon and evening, with several areas of flash flooding expected. The primary area for flash flood potential will exist along the OK/TX Red River vicinity southward toward central Texas and the Big Country. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop during the afternoon and evening across the region, with CAMs suggestive of training/repeating behavior and local areas of 2-5 inch totals. The glancing influence of the aforementioned mid-level wave across the region lends some doubt on degree and location of daytime/afternoon convective coverage, which should modulate the flash flood risk substantially. Even if convection materializes as depicted by CAMs, antecedent dryness of ground conditions are a mitigating factor for a more widespread or significant flash flood risk. Persistent training will likely be needed for ground conditions to lose receptiveness to rainfall on a widespread basis. Both pre-frontal convection and convection moving in along a surface cold front late represent two distinct regimes for heavy rain and flash flood potential - with that risk eventually spreading toward I-35 in Texas and the DFW Metroplex area through early Saturday. Farther north, convection along the front will likely sweep through portions of Missouri and Oklahoma, with a greater risk/potential for multiple mergers and/or convective clusters with southward extent. Areas just southeast of Kansas City received copious amounts of rain Thursday and will probably not have fully recovered before the incoming thunderstorm threat through early Saturday, necessitating maintenance of Slight Risk probabilities there. Lastly, models (primarily CAMs) depict potential for repeating/training convection across portions of northeastern Iowa and vicinity through much of the day (from 16-18Z through well into the evening) along/near a surface warm front and well ahead of an eastward-moving cold front that should reach the area late in the forecast period. NASA Sport soil moistures suggests slightly more moist ground conditions in these areas, and the advance of the mid-level wave and confluence on the northern end of strong 850mb flow all point to prolonged deep convective potential. 3-5 inch totals cannot be ruled out in this regime. A Slight Risk has been added to the outlook in these areas as a result. Though less widespread, additional convection should traverse wet ground conditions across portions of Ohio, Pennsylvania, and southern New York State, supporting continued Marginal probabilities in that area. Cook Day 2 Valid 12Z Sat Apr 04 2026 - 12Z Sun Apr 05 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL AND EASTERN GREAT LAKES SOUTHWESTWARD TO CENTRAL TEXAS AND THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER VALLEY... Much of convective evolution during the D2/Sat forecast period will depend on convective details from lingering convection across Arkansas and Texas left over from D1/Fri. East-northeastward progression of a mid-level wave toward the Great Lakes will aid in southeastward movement of a cold front from the Plains through the Ozarks/Mid-Mississippi Valley during the forecast period. This front will gradually become more parallel to weakening flow aloft from Texas to Mississippi, supporting additional opportunities for training convection as storms organize along remnant outflows and backbuild. This regime suggests that pockets of 1-3 inch rainfall totals are likely especially from central Texas to northern Alabama, with heavier totals also possible from central Mississippi south into southeastern Louisiana as well. While Slight Risk potential exists with this setup, concerns about 1) uncertainty of prior-day convective evolution and 2) antecedent dryness continue to be limiting factors for a more widespread flash flood risk at this time. Farther north, convection is likely to be progressive across much of the Lower Ohio Valley along with potential for inhibited destabilization due to more widespread convection across the Lower Mississippi Valley. Too much uncertainty exists to reduce the Marginal Risk area at this time. Notable exceptions to this general regime exist, however, from northern Ohio into southern New York State and Pennsylvania, where models suggest appreciable daytime heating and moderate instability developing. Storms may not be all that fast moving either in Pennsylvania as that region should reside on the southern extent of stronger mid-level flow into southeastern Canada. Convective coverage is a bit uncertain, but any greater-than-anticipated coverage of convection in this environment could locally raise flash flood concerns - especially with low FFGs noted across that area. Cook Day 3 Valid 12Z Sun Apr 05 2026 - 12Z Mon Apr 06 2026 ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF SOUTH TEXAS ON SUNDAY... Maintained the Marginal Risk of Excessive rainfall area that was introduced by the WPC Medium Range desk as a west-to-east oriented front makes its way southward. Deeper moisture should e pooling along and south of the boundary with precipitable water values around 1.75 inches in place at the start of the outlook period. Given uncertainties detailed n the Day 2 period with respect to the timing and placement...combined with the 03/00Z NCEP global models now showing the front to be more progressive than in earlier runs which led to CAPE being swept out of South Texas faster...was not inclined to introduce a Slight Risk area at this point. At the same point...spaghetti plots from the non-CAM ensembles still show enough members with 1 inch QPF and a few contours of 2 inch QPF to support keeping the Marginal area with only minor nudges around the periphery. Bann Day 1 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.txt Day 2 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoints.txt Day 3 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoints.txt