637 FXUS63 KLSX 052324 AFDLSXArea Forecast Discussion...Updated Aviation National Weather Service Saint Louis MO 624 PM CDT Sun Oct 5 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Much cooler temperatures are forecast starting Tuesday and lasting through Thursday behind a cold front.
- There is a 30-60% chance of showers and a few thunderstorms Monday afternoon through Tuesday morning. Unfortunately, no widespread beneficial rainfall is anticipated.
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.SHORT TERM... (Through Late Monday Afternoon) Issued at 217 PM CDT Sun Oct 5 2025
Dry and quiet weather conditions are expected tonight with light southerly winds. A mostly clear night will give way to increasing midlevel clouds moving northward late tonight. These clouds should help limit the temperature fall, with lows mainly in the low to mid 60s across the region.
A weak midlevel shortwave trough is forecast to move toward the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers by late Monday afternoon. Increasing ascent is expected ahead of this feature, with at least scattered showers moving into southeast Missouri and southern Illinois during the afternoon. There remains some uncertainty on the exact track of the aforementioned shortwave. A slight shift south for instance could leave even our southeastern counties mostly high and dry. The best chances for rainfall remain a bit to our south across western Kentucky/bootheel of Missouri region. This is where probabilities for measurable rainfall climb above 80% from the HREF. Conversely, a slight shift northwest could expand the higher rainfall probabilities further to the northwest, and bring the chances for more significant rainfall into our far south/southeastern counties. Currently, the 12Z HREF shows chances for at least 0.25" of rain of only about 10% in these locations but climb rapidly to around 50% just to our southeast. The disturbance moving across the lower Ohio Valley definitely has some tropical origins however. Precipitable water values over 1.75" are likely in far southeast Missouri/southern Illinois. Those values are very abnormal for early October and near the 99th percentile of climatology. This means that showers, and especially any convective elements, should be quite efficient. There may be a few lucky locations that see several showers/weak thunderstorms on/off during the afternoon hours in our just southeast of our area. If this were to occur, there may be some isolated areas that see 1-2" of rain like the LPMM of the 12Z HREF suggests.
Further to the northwest, there also should be some more pure diurnal showers and a few thunderstorms where there is an axis of modest instability. This activity should focus a bit closer to the I- 44/I-70 corridors in Missouri/Illinois respectively. For northeast Missouri and west-central Illinois, the synoptic cold front begins to move into the area by late afternoon. However, kept PoPs in the slight chance category as most, if not all, of the precipitation looks to be post frontal where stronger mid/upper level forcing for ascent is located along with increasing low/mid level frontogenesis.
High temperatures will be a bit tricky due to increasing cloud cover over much of the area. There is higher confidence in parts of southeast Missouri and southwest Illinois staying mainly in the upper 70s to low 80s due to thicker cloud cover earlier in the morning. Highs in the mid 80s are expected further northwest, and there may be some spotty upper 80s in a southwest-northeast axis where the thicker midlevel clouds do not reach and where diurnal cumulus develops later in the afternoon.
Gosselin
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.LONG TERM... (Monday Night through Next Sunday) Issued at 217 PM CDT Sun Oct 5 2025
(Monday Night - Tuesday)
The cold front is expected to gradually move through the region overnight Monday night through Tuesday morning. Mainly scattered showers and possibly a few rumbles of thunder should focus along the trailing 850-hPa frontal zone. Both the low-level moisture convergence as well as the low/mid level frontogenesis gradually weaken however late Monday night into Tuesday morning, so the coverage of showers may tend to decrease with time and southeastward extent. Deterministic model guidance also show a subtle midlevel shortwave quickly moving across the Mississippi Valley during the day on Tuesday, which could prolong the shower chances through the afternoon. The bad news is it continues to look like there will not be widespread beneficial rainfall associated with this cold frontal passage. The chances for at least a quarter inch of rain are below 20% across the entire area.
The main change behind the front will be the much cooler air temperatures. For most locations, highs on Tuesday afternoon will be some 10-15+ degrees cooler. Chances of showers, increasing low- level cold air advection, and a strong signal for low stratus (925 hPa mean RH from the LREF of 80-95%) all suggest a much more typical fall-like day. Highs are expected to range from the mid 60s to upper 70s from northwest to southeast. These values aren`t exactly "cool" for early October, but after day after day with highs well into the 80s, this cooldown is notable nonetheless.
(Tuesday Night - Thursday Night)
There is high confidence in dry weather with near-normal temperatures (lows 40s/50s and highs in 70s) for the midweek period. This will be mainly due to the presence of a seasonably strong (1030+ hPa; >95th percentile of climatology) surface high moving across the Great Lakes during this time period.
(Friday - Next Sunday)
Forecast uncertainty begins to increase on Friday heading into the following weekend. Ensemble guidance shows quite a bit of spread with the location of a mid/upper level ridge and how far/fast it moves eastward. Deterministic guidance also shows some subtle, weak midlevel shortwaves that may transverse the western periphery of this ridge axis. Some moderation in temperatures is expected, but how warm it will get is definitely a question mark. The spread in the inter-quartile range of the NBM for highs and lows is generally on the order of 6-10 degrees. However, even the 25th percentile of the NBM climbs to above normal values for early/mid October by Friday. Therefore, at least slightly above normal temperatures are very likely. Mostly dry weather is also expected, though low chances of showers return Thursday night and Friday as there may be a midlevel shortwave moving across the region. There remains little/no signal for anything widespread nor significant however in the rainfall department for the foreseeable future.
Gosselin
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.AVIATION... (For the 00z TAFs through 00z Monday Evening) Issued at 621 PM CDT Sun Oct 5 2025
Gusty winds diminish quickly this evening and don`t return tomorrow. Will see some increasing mid level clouds overnight which will help to prevent fog and also keep winds reduced tomorrow. There`s some potential for showers or thunderstorms to develop in various places on Monday, though right now confidence in these occurring at any terminal in particular is too low to include in any TAF. Storms over southeast MO and southern IL are likely to remain south of the St Louis metro while any storms associated with an approaching cold front from the north Monday evening are likely to remain north of Quincy as well. There is the potential for lower ceilings to develop Monday night, just outside of the current TAF period, as the cold front oozes southward.
Kimble
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.LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...None. IL...None. &&
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NWS LSX Office Area Forecast Discussion