154 FXUS01 KWBC 131735 PMDSPD Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 134 PM EDT Mon Apr 13 2026 Valid 00Z Tue Apr 14 2026 - 00Z Thu Apr 16 2026 ...Rounds of strong to severe thunderstorms possible with heavy rain across the Southern/Central Plains during the next couple of days... ...A couple of rounds of severe thunderstorms possible with heavy rain across the Upper Midwest to the Great Lakes tonight and tomorrow... ...Unsettled weather today in California and the northern Intermountains will shift focus to the Four Corners and Pacific Northwest Tuesday into early Wednesday... ...Critical fire weather risk over the central to Southern High Plains... A frontal boundary extending across the northern tier states is forecast to undulate through the next couple days. As low pressure waves form along the front this afternoon, our forecast remains on track for a corridor of severe weather and heavy rainfall to develop across the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes region tonight into Tuesday morning. All modes of severe weather appear possible with the activity tonight, which also will support scattered flash flooding as cells overlap with an area of saturated soils from recent heavy rainfall. A lull in the thunderstorm activity is expected during the day on Tuesday before another round of strong to severe thunderstorms with heavy rain returns later on Tuesday across the Midwest/upper Midwest and into the southern half of the Great Lakes into early Wednesday morning. The interior Northeast will also see a couple of rounds of showers and thunderstorms. The first round is expected today ahead of a warm front followed by a cold front. The next round should bring a higher risk of isolated severe thunderstorms Tuesday night ahead of the next low pressure wave. Further south in the Central/Southern Plains, a well-defined dryline will also yield daily chances of severe thunderstorms and isolated heavy rainfall this week. The same culprit driving the influx of moist and unstable air into the Heartland (Bermuda High) will also usher in anomalous warmth into the Eastern U.S. High temperatures well into the 80s will begin to challenge daily records in the east-central U.S. beginning Tuesday afternoon. West of the Continental Divide, the recent round of heavy mountain snow and low-elevation rain across California will begin to taper off today as a low pressure system moves farther inland and weakens. The northern Intermountain region will get a round of high-elevation snow and lower-elevation rain today as the northern edge of the low pressure system interacts with a front arriving from Canada. Unsettled weather will then shift focus to the Four Corners on Tuesday as the upper low/trough penetrates farther inland, while a separate round of rain and high-elevation snow arrives in the Pacific Northwest ahead of another system. As the warm air expands eastward from the Plains to the Eastern U.S. over the next couple of days, a cooling trend will gradually work its way across the Western U.S. with the ongoing unsettled weather. West of the aforementioned dryline, a combination warm temperatures, dry air and some gusty winds will promote a Critical Risk of fire weather over the Central to Southern High Plains and nearby Southern Rockies over the next couple of days. Asherman/Kong Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php $$