Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    18,663
    Total Members
    25,819
    Most Online
    tmcandrew
    Newest Member
    tmcandrew
    Joined

Central PA Summer 2026 Discussion/Obs Thread


Recommended Posts

530 AM Saturday June 13th, 2026: Enjoy today with lots of sun and lower humidity than in recent days. There is potential for more strong to severe storms on Sunday, mainly during the afternoon into the evening. The main threat will be strong winds and heavy downpours.
May be an image of map and text that says 'Highlighted Area: Pennsylvania Severe Weather Outlook Sunday, June 14, 2026 Last Updated: Jun un1 13 132 320 202 2026 1215 AM M CDT Valid Until:J n 2026 0700 700A AM Erie Meadville Bradford Oil City Williamsport DuBois Scranton Pittsburgh State College Johnstown Allentown Harrisburg nORA Lancaster Philadelphia National Weather Service Prediction Center https://www.spc.noaa.gov 5 High Risk Moderate Risk Enhanced Risk Slight Risk Risk 1 Thunderstorms'
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Several degrees cooler today and much less humid. Highs will still be several degrees above normal levels. Much more humid again tomorrow before a strong cold front crosses the area tomorrow night. We should see temperatures falling back below normal both Monday and Tuesday before we warm up again toward the end of the week. Shower chances increase tomorrow afternoon into the evening with the cold front.

image.png.a293b7a307a9f29b3c90f0e8dff45cf1.pngimage.thumb.png.3d4f763937ac5b61b8314133eb8f9bbe.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here in Chester County PA most spots have seen an above normal amount of 90+ days so far this season. Below are the number so far this season by station along with the average per typical season along with the most and least by station. You can clearly see how relative elevation across our area impacts the number of such days. Also below you can see our average annual number of 90+ days is showing a clear reduction in number as we compare past decades to the 2020's.

image.png.7a2e5a6b92fec9e82cbfcb1493c581c2.pngimage.thumb.png.f633659c788dba4c0fc09378091a4c34.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Itstrainingtime said:

From what I read on CTP's discussion this morning, an extremely rare day 6 outlook for central PA next Thursday.

ZCZC SPCSWOD48 ALL
   ACUS48 KWNS 130753
   SPC AC 130753

   Day 4-8 Convective Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0253 AM CDT Sat Jun 13 2026

   Valid 161200Z - 211200Z

   ...DISCUSSION...
   ...Days 5-6/Wed-Thu -- Lower MO/Mid-MS Valley to Ohio Valley and
   Mid-Atlantic...

   An upper trough is forecast to deepen over the Upper Midwest/Great
   Lakes on Wednesday. As this occurs, an intensifying 500 mb jet
   streak will develop across the central Plains and increase to 80-100
   kt as it moves into the Mid-MS Valley Wednesday night, and spreads
   eastward across the Ohio Valley and Northeast on Thursday. 

   At the surface, low pressure will develop over the northern/central
   Plains late Tuesday night into early Wednesday. As this occurs,
   increasing southerly low-level flow will quickly transport rich Gulf
   moisture northward into the Lower MO/Mid-MS Valley by Wednesday
   afternoon as the surface low moves across IA and a trailing cold
   front moves eastward in tandem with the low across portions of the
   central Plains and Mid-MS Valley. Strong to extreme instability is
   forecast across the strongly sheared warm sector. An all-hazards
   severe thunderstorm event appears likely. An intense southwesterly
   low-level jet is expected to develop during the evening. This could
   support upscale growth into an MCS moving across portions of the
   Midwest Wednesday night, posing a risk for swaths of damaging winds.

   This system will spread east on Thursday across parts of the Ohio
   Valley into the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast. A continued risk for all
   severe hazards, and possible MCS with damaging winds, will persist
   as the mid/upper jet streak is forecast to remain quite strong as it
   overspreads a seasonally moist airmass.

   While some timing differences of aforementioned features is evident
   in various NWP guidance, overall medium range consensus and mean
   calibrated ML/AI guidance suggests a multi-day severe episode is
   likely as this system overspreads portions of the Midwest to the
   Mid-Atlantic/Northeast, though the 15 percent risk areas may shift
   in the coming days as details become better resolved, and higher
   probabilities are possible in subsequent outlooks. The southern
   extent of severe potential is more uncertain across parts of the
   Plains toward the TN Valley as these areas will remain further
   removed from stronger flow aloft
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

    There are some questions about tomorrow's setup, the big one, being the possible lack of instability. What started off looking like could be an anomalous storm season for cpa fell off a cliff quick. Instability and weak capping has been about as hard to come by the spring, as any of i've seen. That said, we all know big shifts are taking place right now so let's see what happens. Seems like we're moving in the right direction for increased convection opportunities and most importantly precipitation. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

28 minutes ago, Yardstickgozinya said:

    There are some questions about tomorrow's setup, the big one, being the possible lack of instability. What started off looking like could be an anomalous storm season for cpa fell off a cliff quick. Instability and weak capping has been about as hard to come by the spring, as any of i've seen. That said, we all know big shifts are taking place right now so let's see what happens. Seems like we're moving in the right direction for increased convection opportunities and most importantly precipitation. 

NAM had very scattered activity during the late afternoon and evening followed by a squall line around midnight that was weakening by that point.

I want rain but not the severe. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...