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U.S. Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

   ZCZC SPCFWDDY1 ALL
   FNUS21 KWNS 191600

   Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   1100 AM CDT Sun Apr 19 2026

   Valid 191700Z - 201200Z

   ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN HIGH
   PLAINS...

   ...Morning Update...
   No changes were made to the previous forecast. Across the southern
   Plains, morning surface observations depict widespread values of
   less than 20 percent RH owing to poor overnight humidity recoveries.
   Decreasing high clouds early this afternoon will promote deeper
   mixing with RH dropping to 5-15 percent and strong gusts of up to 35
   mph mixing down to the surface, maintaining Critical fire weather
   concerns. Across the Piedmont/Southeast, a shield of high clouds
   will gradually become more transparent with sporadic areas of
   partially sunny skies this afternoon. 12z soundings portray a very
   dry airmass up to 4-6 km, with 30-45 kt winds just above the
   surface. Areas that see breaks in the clouds will likely experience
   deeper mixing, contributing to stronger wind gusts upwards of 25-30
   mph in localized areas. Northwesterly winds are expected to decrease
   this evening, however, dry air will persist overnight across much of
   the Southeast. This may lead to poor overnight humidity recoveries,
   further exacerbating the fire environment into Day 2/Monday. See the
   previous discussion for more information.

   ..Elizalde-Garcia.. 04/19/2026

   .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0158 AM CDT Sun Apr 19 2026/

   ...Synopsis...
   Elevated to critical fire weather conditions are expected this
   afternoon across portions of the southern and central High Plains as
   well as across parts of the Southeast. Both fire weather regimes
   will be influenced by building surface high pressure in the wake of
   a cold front pushing into the northern Gulf and southeast Atlantic
   coast. 

   ...Central/Southern High Plains...
   Building surface high pressure is noted across the southern Plains
   with very dry conditions (dewpoints in the teens to single digits)
   observed across western TX into western KS. Southwest winds are
   forecast to strengthen to 15-25 mph on the western periphery of the
   surface high this afternoon as a dry return flow regime becomes
   established. Mostly sunny skies coupled with very low boundary-layer
   moisture will support deep mixing and RH minimums in the single
   digits to low teens. Critical fire weather conditions remain likely
   across the TX/OK Panhandles into southwest KS where gusts up to 30
   mph appear likely. Given recent fire activity across northwest TX,
   the fuel environment will support the fire weather threat. 

   ...Southeast States...
   06 UTC surface observations depict a cold front pushing eastward
   across the Southeast. Although scattered showers accompany this
   front, latest forecast depicts low probability for wetting rainfall
   across northern FL into central GA and SC, which will likely be
   insufficient to mitigate ERC values well above the 95th percentile.
   In the wake of the cold front, west/northwest winds will prevail
   across much of the region. A combination of dry air advection and
   downslope flow off the southern Appalachians will contribute to
   widespread 15-25% RH minimums. Elevated to locally critical fire
   weather conditions should become fairly widespread as winds increase
   into the 15-20 mph with localized gusts upwards of 25-30 mph.
      

U.S. Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook


   ZCZC SPCFWDDY2 ALL
   FNUS22 KWNS 191855

   Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0155 PM CDT Sun Apr 19 2026

   Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

   ...Afternoon Update...
   Only minor changes were made to expand and confine the Elevated fire
   weather highlights based on recent high resolution guidance. Across
   the Piedmont, partly cloudy skies may increase RH values and inhibit
   deeper mixing across some parts of the region on Monday afternoon.
   However, poor overnight humidity recoveries and westerly winds of
   10-15 mph in terrain influenced areas will continue to support an
   Elevated fire weather threat. In the Southeast, northeasterly winds
   of up to 15 mph (gusts up to 20 mph) are expected where
   exceptionally dry fuels exist. Despite winds decreasing slightly
   throughout the day, areas where very low RH of 15-20 percent and
   gustier winds overlap may promote locally critical fire weather
   conditions. Farther west, portions of eastern WY may experience
   localized critical fire weather conditions where sporadic gusts of
   up to 35 mph are possible in the lee of the Laramie Mountains.
   However, lack of mid-level support and the narrow duration of strong
   winds overlapping low RH precludes the introduction of critical
   highlights at this time.

   Increasing mid-level moisture with afternoon heating and resultant
   instability may support isolated thunderstorms across south-central
   NM into eastern AZ. PWATs of 0.5-0.75" with a prominent dry
   sub-cloud layer should limit precipitation, allowing for the threat
   of dry thunderstorms to evolve. While widespread ERCs are below the
   90th percentile in this region, recent fire activity depicts
   receptivity where pockets of drier fuels exist.

   See the previous discussion for more information.

   ..Elizalde-Garcia.. 04/19/2026

   .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0204 AM CDT Sun Apr 19 2026/

   ...Synopsis...
   Areas of elevated fire weather conditions are expected across parts
   of the High Plains and the Southeast on Monday. Upper-level ridging
   will gradually shift east from the Rockies into the Plains through
   the day. While surface high pressure shifts east over the Southeast
   states, a lee trough will deepen along the northern High Plains,
   resulting in areas of breezy conditions over dry fuels. 

   ...High Plains...
   A deepening lee trough along the northern High Plains will support
   strengthening west/southwest winds to the west of the trough axis
   across eastern WY into western NE. Further south, a tightening
   pressure gradient in proximity to a lingering surface high over
   eastern TX will promote strengthening winds across the OK/TX
   Panhandle region. Within both regimes, ensemble guidance suggests
   sustained winds between 15-20 mph are likely. RH minimums in the
   teens are likely across WY into NE where downslope wind will depress
   moisture content within an antecedent dry air mass. Further south,
   the northern fringe of returning moisture will begin nosing into
   western TX. This may limit RH reductions to some degree, but RH
   minimums will likely fall into at least the low 20s given model
   guidance tendency to display a moist bias at the surface within the
   early stages of moisture return.

   ...Southeast...
   A dry air mass will reside across much of the Southeast where fuels
   will likely remain dry owing to limited rainfall forecast over the
   next 24-48 hours for much of the region. In general, gradient winds
   will weaken through the day as surface high pressure builds across
   the region. However, areas of breezy conditions will likely persist
   in the lee of the southern Appalachians and along the northeastern
   Gulf coast. Sustained winds near 15 mph within a dry air mass (RH
   minimums in the teens to twenties) will likely support another day
   of elevated fire weather conditions.

   ...New Mexico to eastern Arizona...
   Low to mid-level moisture return is anticipated across southern TX
   and into central NM through Monday afternoon. Although forcing for
   ascent will be modest under an upper-level ridge, a combination of
   localized orographic ascent and deeply mixed boundary-layers with
   minimal inhibition will support isolated thunderstorm development.
   Storm motions around 10 knots will likely support pockets of wetting
   precipitation, but PWAT values between 0.6 to 0.7 inches will likely
   support dry lightning strikes outside of the heavier precipitation
   cores. With regional ERCs near the 75th to 80th percentile,
   lightning ignitions appear possible.


U.S. Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook


   ZCZC SPCFWDD38 ALL
   FNUS28 KWNS 182156

   Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0456 PM CDT Sat Apr 18 2026

   Valid 201200Z - 261200Z

   ...Synopsis...
   A pronounced upper-level trough across the northeastern U.S. on Day
   3/Monday will move offshore into the Atlantic by Day 4/Tuesday,
   while ridging builds over central CONUS. Offshore flow trajectories
   under the deeper northwest flow from the departing upper trough will
   support a continued fire weather threat across portions of the Mid
   Atlantic, Southeast and FL on Day 3/Monday. Farther west, an
   upper-level trough will impinge upon the West Coast on Day
   4/Tuesday. Fire weather concerns are expected to reemerge across
   portions of the Southwest and central/southern Plains as the
   upper-level trough and associated stronger mid-level flow progress
   eastward midweek, with surface lee troughing evolving across the
   northern and central Plains on Day 5-6/Wednesday-Thursday. 

   ...Day 3-4/Monday-Tuesday...
   ...Central and Southern Plains...
   Modest westerly flow aloft along with a surface trough across the
   northern Plains will promote downslope enhanced drying and breezy
   west winds across eastern WY into the NE Panhandle and southwestern
   SD on Day 3/Monday. Farther south, increasing southerly winds south
   of the surface trough amid dry boundary layer conditions should
   result in a fire weather concern from the northern TX Panhandle
   northeastward into much of southwestern KS. 40% critical
   probabilities for both regions remain largely intact.

   ...Mid-Atlantic, Southeast and Florida...
   A fire weather threat will continue for portions of the Mid Atlantic
   and Southeast on Day 3/Monday as dry, post-frontal flow and robust
   northwesterly flow aloft impacts the region. Dry conditions and a
   steady northeast wind across FL is expected on Day 4/Tuesday as
   surface high pressure settles into the Deep South.

   ...Southwest...
   A mid-level perturbation and increasing mid/upper moisture from the
   Pacific should bring some high-based afternoon convection to
   portions of eastern AZ into central NM on Day 3/Monday. Dry and warm
   conditions will further dry fuels with some ignitions possible from
   isolated dry thunderstorm activity. Dry and breezy conditions return
   mid week as the next robust upper trough moves into the
   Intermountain West, with potential impact on holdover ignitions. A
   10% dry thunderstorm probability was introduced to highlight this
   threat.

   ...Day 5-6/Wednesday-Thursday...
   A deepening surface low across the northern High Plains ahead of the
   approaching upper-level trough and associated increased southwest
   flow aloft will bring a more expansive fire weather threat to much
   of the High Plains and portions of the Southwest for the middle of
   next week where fuels remain receptive. Introduced a 70% critical
   probability for southeastern CO, northeastern NM, southwestern KS
   and portions of the OK/TX Panhandles for Day 5/Wednesday, where a
   mid-level jet aligns with tightening surface pressure gradients
   associated with the deepening lee trough. Downslope enhanced drying
   and stronger west/southwest winds continue across much of the
   Southwest and Southern Plains on Day 6/Thursday as the mid-level
   trough ejects into the Plains. Broad 40% critical probabilities were
   maintained for the Southwest and Southern Plains.

   ..Williams.. 04/18/2026
      




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