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Charlack, Missouri Weather Forecast Discussion

820
FXUS63 KLSX 021930
AFDLSX

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Saint Louis MO 230 PM CDT Thu Oct 2 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Unseasonably warm temperatures are expected to continue through early next week.

- A cold front is forecast to move through the region between Tuesday and Tuesday night. This front will bring a chance (30-40%) of showers and thunderstorms along with much cooler temperatures by Wednesday.

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.SHORT TERM... (Through Late Friday Afternoon) Issued at 229 PM CDT Thu Oct 2 2025

Isolated showers and a few rumbles of thunder will remain possible into this evening before dissipating with loss of daytime instability. A stray shower or two cannot be completely ruled out overnight with broad, weak low-level moisture convergence. By and large however, look for a dry overnight with scattered midlevel clouds and light/variable winds. A mild night is expected in terms of temperatures with lows in the low to mid 60s. A few spots may get below the 60 degree mark if less cloud cover is observed than forecast in favored river valleys in east central and southeast Missouri.

Persistence is the word for Friday with another day of unseasonable warmth. Highs are forecast to reach into the mid to upper 80s. Mid/upper level ridging is slightly stronger on Friday with less daytime instability. Will therefore keep the forecast dry, but a stray shower or two may occur in northeast Missouri/west central Illinois during the afternoon hours.

Gosselin

&&

.LONG TERM... (Friday Night through Next Thursday) Issued at 229 PM CDT Thu Oct 2 2025

(Friday Night - Monday Night)

There is very little change anticipated in the synoptic pattern this weekend into early next week with strong mid/upper level ridging anchored across the southeastern CONUS. Dry weather with well-above normal temperatures are expected through the period.

There may be one fly in the ointment regarding the dry forecast however. There are some hints that a midlevel disturbance may migrate northward from the Gulf coast toward the mid-Mississippi Valley on Monday. This signal is fairly weak however, with only about 30% of LREF members showing measurable rainfall.

(Tuesday - Next Thursday)

There are increasing signs of a real cold frontal passage sometime Tuesday/Tuesday night ushering in a significant air mass change. Both of the EPS/GEFS have trended cooler over the past 24-36 hours, now depicting 850-hPa anomalies of -1 to -3C by Wednesday. The NAEFS is showing a 1026+ hPa surface high moving into the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes behind the cold front as well. This area of surface high pressure would be >90th percentile of climatology. There however is still some uncertainty, both with respect to the timing of the front, as well as the strength of the air mass behind the boundary. One of the four clusters (~26% of members) of the 500- hPa height pattern shows a much weaker trough moving across the Great Lakes and would not bring much cooler temperatures into the area. The other three clusters all show a strong mid/upper level trough moving across the Great Lakes, though with one cluster about 12 hours faster than the other two. The most likely scenario is for temperatures to get back closer to normal starting Wednesday. The spread however is pretty high, with the spread between the 25th/75th percentiles 8-12 degrees. That is the difference between temperatures about 5 degrees below normal to 5 degrees above normal. This break in the anomalously warm pattern may be short-lived however as ensemble guidance shows rising mid/upper level heights and increasing low-level warm air advection commencing again heading into the following weekend.

The best chance of widespread rainfall in almost 2 weeks should come with the frontal passage itself. Currently, PoPs are only in the 30- 40% range Tuesday/Tuesday night. However, the expectation is for them to come up as timing differences with respect to the cold front decrease. For reference, the LREF has about 70% of members with measurable rainfall across the CWA in the 24-hour period ending late Tuesday night. The bad news? At this early juncture at least, widespread significant rainfall appears unlikely with only about 10% of members showing at least a half inch of rain.

Gosselin

&&

.AVIATION... (For the 18z TAFs through 18z Friday Afternoon) Issued at 1212 PM CDT Thu Oct 2 2025

Isolated showers and thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and into early this evening, mainly across portions of southeast Missouri. The metro terminals may get impacted by this activity, but probabilities were too low to add anything for the TAFs. Outside of any shower/weak thunderstorms, dry/VFR conditions with light southerly winds are expected through Friday morning.

Gosselin

&&

.LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...None. IL...None. &&

$$

WFO LSX

NWS LSX Office Area Forecast Discussion

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