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Westmoreland, Kansas Weather Forecast Discussion

248
FXUS63 KTOP 051111
AFDTOP

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Topeka KS 611 AM CDT Sun Oct 5 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Another warm and windy day today with storm chances across north- central and central Kansas this evening.

- A few storms in the early evening hours could be strong to severe posing a risk for hail and damaging winds. Storms are expected to weaken by 9-10 PM.

- Scattered chances (30-50%) for rain and storms continue through the day Monday before another round of more widespread (40- 60%) rain/storms return Monday evening into early Tuesday morning.

- Precipitation chances exit Tuesday morning with cooler temperatures building in Tuesday and Wednesday.

&&

.DISCUSSION... Issued at 326 AM CDT Sun Oct 5 2025

Water vapor imagery this morning shows a shortwave tracking into the northern Plains that is associated with a longer lifting trough over the Mountain West. In response to the ejecting upper wave, a surface trough has begun to track east off the lee of the Rockies, currently stretching from southeastern CO to east-central ND. Across the southeastern US, a large dome of high pressure remains near- stationary. Throughout the day today, the tight pressure gradient ahead of the main surface trough will again lead to gusty southern winds as it tracks towards north-central Kansas by the evening. With ample sunshine, deep diurnal mixing and WAA, expect temperatures this afternoon to top out in the mid to upper 80s once again.

By the early evening hours, the surface trough will have tracked into north-central Kansas where subtle convergence should be sufficient enough for convective initiation. Forecast soundings depict inverted-v profiles with fairly modest ML lapse rates. While shear aloft (~40 knots of 0-6km bulk shear) should be more than sufficient for strong and organized convection, the marginal CAPE values of 500-1000 J/kg do not seem to point to very potent and strong updrafts. In addition, some dry air aloft may lead to dry air entrainment into updrafts further providing difficulties for convection to become severe for long durations. All that said, initial convection (generally between 6-8 PM) could see a few storms become strong to severe with damaging winds of 60 mph likely being the main hazard. Cannot rule out some isolated large hail in initial convection, but overall, it does not look like a usual large hail event. Storms this evening will quickly grow upscale given shear orientations along the boundary. Low-level flow increasing ahead of the boundary Sunday night into Monday morning will promote widespread precipitation across central and north-central Kansas. Additionally, models do not seem to move the axis of QPF much during this time range so some areas could see some appreciable rainfall. With PWATs overnight ranging from 1.25-1.5", a narrow axis of rainfall exceeding an inch is becoming more likely (50-60% from HREF Probabilities) with 25th to 75th HREF accumulations overnight generally sitting at 0.75"-1.25" for areas from Concordia to Marysville. Rain and storm chances continue through Monday, increasing again Monday evening and into Tuesday morning as isentropic ascent overnight helps revamp lift and moisture. Guidance seems to keep the main QPF axis again stretched from central to northeastern Kansas with areas in east-central and southeastern Kansas missing out on most of the rainfall. By Tuesday morning, expected total rainfall totals for this event will range between 0.4"-1.25" north and west of I-35 with only a few hundredths to a few tenths south and east of I-35.

Subsidence quickly builds in behind the wave Tuesday morning and afternoon and ushers in a cool ridge of high pressure across the region. Mostly cloudy skies Tuesday and CAA should allow temperatures to not warm much above the upper 60s and low 70s with similar (but sunnier) conditions expected Wednesday. The remainder of the week should stay fairly dry as a slow increase in mid-level heights build back across the central Plains and return afternoon temperatures to the low 80s by the weekend. That said, temperature spreads Thursday and beyond are still 8-10 degrees, so overall confidence in another warming trend is not overly high.

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.AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY/... Issued at 608 AM CDT Sun Oct 5 2025

Winds continue to be the main focus of the TAF at all sites with southerly gusts upwards of 30-35 mph will be common this afternoon. Did add mention of precipitation and VCTS at KMHK late in the period as decaying storms moving out of central Kansas will begin to move east by the early morning Monday.

&&

.TOP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Griesemer AVIATION...Griesemer

NWS TOP Office Area Forecast Discussion

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