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U.S. Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

   ZCZC SPCFWDDY1 ALL
   FNUS21 KWNS 081535

   Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   1035 AM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026

   Valid 081700Z - 091200Z

   ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHWEST SOUTH
   CAROLINA INTO EASTERN AND SOUTH-CENTRAL GEORGIA...

   ...Morning Update...
   The previous forecast remains on track. Passing high clouds this
   morning and increasing mid-level clouds this afternoon may dampen
   the fire environment in some areas. However, 15-20 mph northeasterly
   winds overlapping near 20 percent RH for at least a few hours will
   continue to support Critical fire weather in east/central Georgia
   into southwestern South Carolina. Farther north, high resolution
   guidance indicates breezy northeasterly winds of 10-15 mph and RH of
   30-35 percent may extend closer to the North Carolina coastline, but
   this region received sufficient rainfall in the last 72 hours,
   precluding an eastward expansion of Elevated highlights. See the
   previous discussion for more information.

   ..Elizalde-Garcia/Stearns.. 04/08/2026

   .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0213 AM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026/

   ...Synopsis...
   Upper-level ridging will persist across the Southwest today as an
   upper-level trough progresses eastward across the far northern Great
   Plains/southern Canada. Meanwhile, a closed upper-level low will
   simultaneously approach the California coastline. At the surface, a
   cold front will move east-southeastward across the central Great
   Plains and Midwest while surface high pressure shifts offshore of
   the Northeast.

   ...Portions of the Southeast...
   Surface high pressure will continue to favor enhanced northeasterly
   flow across much of the Southeast today. Sustained surface winds of
   10-15 mph are expected to coincide with reduced RH of 25-35% and
   dry, receptive fuels to promote elevated fire weather concerns from
   north-central North Carolina southwestward into portions of southern
   Georgia. Latest high-res guidance continues to suggest a corridor of
   stronger winds (15-20 mph) will overlap minimum RH values as low as
   ~20% (locally lower) during peak mixing, which will support a period
   of Critical fire weather conditions from southwestern South Carolina
   into eastern/south-central Georgia. Locally elevated conditions will
   also be possible into eastern North Carolina and northeastern South
   Carolina; however, recent heavier rainfall accumulations across
   these areas are expected to preclude any widespread concerns.

   ...Portions of the central/southern High Plains...
   Locally elevated conditions will be possible across portions of the
   central/southern High Plains this afternoon, especially where gap
   flows and terrain effects enhance downslope flow conditions. The
   greatest potential will be across portions of southern Wyoming,
   southern South Dakota, and eastern Colorado. The combination of
   winds, RH, and fuels is expected to largely remain below elevated
   thresholds, thus widespread fire weather concerns are not
   anticipated at this time.
      

U.S. Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook


   ZCZC SPCFWDDY2 ALL
   FNUS22 KWNS 081942

   Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0242 PM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026

   Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

   ...Afternoon Update...
   The Elevated risk area was expanded slightly southward to account
   for an expected overlap of southwesterly ~15 mph winds and RH of
   10-20 percent atop dry fuels. Passing high clouds in the morning
   with increasing mid-level clouds in the afternoon may dampen the
   overall fire environment to some extent. However, any afternoon
   storms that manage to develop (especially near the moisture
   gradient) could produce erratic downburst winds. Given the dry
   sub-cloud layer, low PWATs, and 50-150 J/kg MUCAPE, a few lightning
   ignitions cannot be ruled out. With the very isolated nature of
   storm development and potential for wetting rainfall into Day
   3/Friday, dry thunderstorm probabilities have been withheld. See the
   previous discussion for more information.

   Across parts of the Northeast, dry and breezy conditions may promote
   locally elevated fire weather concerns. RH of 25-35 percent combined
   with southerly winds of 10-15 mph are expected, though questionable
   fuels preclude any introduction of Elevated highlights. However,
   weather conditions will support fire spread within pockets of drier
   fine fuels.

   ..Elizalde-Garcia/Stearns.. 04/08/2026

   .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0217 AM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026/

   ...Synopsis...
   Largely zonal flow will be in place across much of the Rockies on
   D2/Thursday as a closed upper-level trough approaches the California
   coastline and a series of shortwave troughs rotates through the
   northern Great Lakes region. At the surface, weak low pressure
   center is forecast to develop across southeastern Colorado, with a
   trailing dryline extending southward across the central High Plains
   and a cold front extending northeastward across the central Great
   Plains.

   ...Portions of the southern High Plains...
   Relative humidity values are forecast to fall to 10-20% across
   portions of the southern High Plains Thursday afternoon amid peak
   mixing. Latest high-res guidance also suggests that a tightened
   surface pressure gradient will favor sustained south-southwesterly
   winds around 15 mph across this region. With dry, receptive fuels in
   place across the region, this combination of winds/RH is expected to
   promote a few hours of elevated fire weather conditions across
   portions of northeastern New Mexico, extreme southeastern Colorado,
   the western Oklahoma Panhandle, and the northwestern Texas
   Panhandle.

   Increased mid-level moisture atop deep, dry boundary layers
   (forecast soundings suggest boundary layers may extend up to ~500 mb
   or 3-4 km AGL), may also support the development of isolated,
   high-based convection across the region. With PWATs on the order of
   half an inch or less, little precipitation is expected, but
   outflow/wind gusts from this convection may locally augment surface
   winds speeds. With forecast soundings indicating the presence of
   50-100 J/kg MUCAPE atop the boundary layer, an occasional dry
   lightning strike may also be possible across this area. Confidence
   in the coverage of potential dry thunderstorms remains low at this
   time, but trends will be monitored for future outlook issuances.

   ...Portions of the Great Basin/Southwest...
   Southwesterly winds of 10-20 mph are expected to overlap low RH of
   15-20% across portions of the southern Great Basin and Southwest.
   These factors may generate locally elevated fire weather concerns
   Thursday afternoon; however, recent cooler weather, precipitation,
   and resultant marginal fuels are expected to temper widespread fire
   weather concerns at this time.


U.S. Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook


   ZCZC SPCFWDD38 ALL
   FNUS28 KWNS 082200

   Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0500 PM CDT Wed Apr 08 2026

   Valid 101200Z - 161200Z

   ...Synopsis...
   A large upper-level trough approaches the California coast on Day
   3/Friday while another upper trough traverses the Great Lakes into
   the Northeast and temporary zonal flow continues over the Great
   Plains. On Day 4/Saturday, an upper-level shortwave will move across
   the central U.S., sending the first lee-surface low northeastward
   over the Great Plains and Midwest through Day 6/Monday. A secondary
   lee-surface low ejects off the Rockies on Day 6/Monday, traversing
   the Midwest and Great Lakes region by Day 7/Tuesday. This scenario
   is likely to result in multiple days of precipitation across much of
   the western and central US, which would temporarily dampen fire
   weather threats. Sporadic areas of little to no precipitation will
   be possible, but are difficult to pin point due to the highly
   dynamic pattern.

   ...Great Basin - Day 3/Friday...
   The best chances for fire weather conditions under southerly flow
   will occur on Day 3/Friday across portions of eastern UT into
   western CO. Southwesterly winds of 15-20 mph (gusts up to 30 mph)
   combined with 15-20% RH atop preconditioned, drying fuels from Day
   2/Thursday is expected to generate Elevated fire weather conditions.
   Precipitation arrival on Day 4/Saturday afternoon may provide relief
   to any ongoing or new fire starts. 

   ...Middle Mississippi Valley - Day 5/Sunday...
   Ongoing drying conditions through the rest of this week and
   increasing potential for 10+ mph southerly winds on Day 5/Sunday may
   promote locally elevated fire weather concerns across northeastern
   AR, southeastern MO, and western TN. Portions of this region range
   from D2-D4 drought, though higher chances for wetting rainfall does
   arrive middle of next week. Given model uncertainty in how far
   northeast the gulf moisture may advect combined with questionable
   fuels, critical probabilities have been withheld for now.

   ...Southern/Central Plains - Day 5/Sunday through Day 6/Monday...
   Possible fire weather conditions return on Day 5/Sunday as a more
   potent shortwave moves across the High Plains. On Day 6/Monday, a
   secondary upper-level trough is forecast to move across the
   Southwest. Considering the overall pattern, areas behind an emerging
   dryline and along a downslope regime will need to be watched closely
   for fire weather concerns. However, given model uncertainty in the
   timing of the shortwave and coincident surface low development, and
   the potential for widespread appreciable rainfall on Day 3/Friday -
   Day 4/Saturday, critical probabilities have been withheld for now.

   ..Elizalde-Garcia/Stearns.. 04/08/2026
      




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