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2026 Mid-Atlantic Severe Storm General Discussion


Kmlwx
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I'm doing it....the 2026 iteration starts today. With potential warm weather on the horizon, we will likely see the start of the pencil thing gusty shower line season. 

@yoda - I feel like you're usually on board with early tracking with me. 

Excited to get back to our smaller spring/summer crew...The winter weenies can take their bickering away soon enough. As much as I hate summer heat - I tolerate it for thunderstorms. 

And now....I will go back to watching CFS/weeklies/CSU-MLP/CIPS pages for signs of our first threats! 

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2 hours ago, Kmlwx said:

I'm doing it....the 2026 iteration starts today. With potential warm weather on the horizon, we will likely see the start of the pencil thing gusty shower line season. 

@yoda - I feel like you're usually on board with early tracking with me. 

Excited to get back to our smaller spring/summer crew...The winter weenies can take their bickering away soon enough. As much as I hate summer heat - I tolerate it for thunderstorms. 

And now....I will go back to watching CFS/weeklies/CSU-MLP/CIPS pages for signs of our first threats! 

Remember... the new type of convective outlooks come out starting next week with the 1630z Day 1 March 3rd outlook.

https://www.spc.noaa.gov/exper/conditional-intensity-information/

 

 

 

 

image.thumb.png.e9a2b3c5da19f24a227ba5e2f4215c77.png

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The 2nd half of the coming week has some minor potential. GFS has some modest supercell composite parameters - and even the Euro has some instability around. Interesting enough for early March, at least. Nothing substantial, of course. 

CSU-MLP has some minor probs painted over some of our area Friday. 

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19 hours ago, Eskimo Joe said:

I can't decipher these new outlooks. My astigmatism makes these hatched maps almost unreadable. 

It's definitely a little wacky looking - I'm not sure other than doing completely separate color-coded maps how they could have implemented this differently. I like the idea/principle, though! 

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I think there could be some non-zero chances into next week. CSU MLP page looks "decent enough for this time of year" for next Wednesday, for example. It's always going to be slim pickings in March (and even most of April) - but I'm intrigued that as soon as warmer temps rolled in some of the predictive tools ramped up just a touch. 

Give us some unseasonably warm/humid days in April into May and something will probably pop off with how dynamics systems can still be that time of year. 

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Seems could be interesting out west tomorrow afternoon into night?  Afternoon discussion from LWX 

We`re expecting two rounds of storms tomorrow. The first round
is expected to form within a surface trough just to the east of
the Alleghenies during the mid-late afternoon hours. Model
soundings show a fair amount of dry air in place aloft, and
large scale forcing for ascent won`t be overly strong, so areal
coverage with this first round of storms is only expected to be
isolated to scattered in nature. If storms do become well
established, the background environment will have enough
instability (around 1000 J/kg of MLCAPE) and shear (around 40
knots in the 0-6 km layer) to promote updraft rotation.
Isolated instances of damaging winds or hail may be possible
with these storms as they move eastward from the Potomac
Highlands toward the I-81 corridor and then the Blue
Ridge/Catoctins during the mid-late afternoon hours. Conditions
will likely remain dry to the east of US-15 during the daylight
hours.

A second round of pre-existing storms will approach from the
Ohio Valley, reaching the Allegheny Front around sunset. This
round of storms could be well organized into a squall line, and
may potentially be quite intense. With the loss of daytime
heating, the trend will likely be downward with the strength of
this activity as it moves into our area, but damaging winds may
still be possible, especially along and west of the Allegheny
Front. Large scale forcing for ascent may enable these storms
to hold together in a weakened form as they move eastward across
the forecast area during the first half of the night.

As of now, SPC has Garrett County in Slight Risk for severe
thunderstorms, with locations further east to about US-15 in a
Marginal Risk.
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