textproduct: Wichita
This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.
KEY MESSAGES
- Cooler below average temperatures with dry conditions through Monday.
- Next chance for showers/storms looks to arrive Tuesday afternoon and night.
- Hot conditions will develop on Wednesday along with the potential for severe storms for south central and southeast Kansas during the evening/night.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 112 PM CDT Sun Jun 14 2026
A stable post-frontal regime has overspread the area today with pleasant and tranquil weather conditions. A ridge of high pressure at the surface will dominate the weather tonight before gradually shifting eastward into the Middle Mississippi Valley area on Monday afternoon. This will allow southerly flow to return to the Central Plains from west to east as we move through the day on Monday. Abundant insolation and light southerly winds will allow temperatures to recover with highs in the lower 80s for most areas on Monday.
Monday night into Tuesday...a shortwave trough moving over the Upper Mississippi Valley toward the Great Lakes will drive a cold front south across the Central Plains late Monday night into Tuesday. It will be hard to rule out some elevated showers and storms ahead of the boundary Monday night into early Tue with some modest mid-lvl waa progged ahead of the approaching cold front. We continue to see some differences with timing and southward extent of the cold front on Tuesday. If it hangs up across Kansas supported by the GFS/ECMWF it could provide a focus for showers and thunderstorms but some of the guidance has the front moving into the Southern Plains on Tuesday afternoon. A nocturnal LLJ may focus elevated showers and storms late Tuesday night into early Wed, but better chances may remain north and east of our area over parts of northeast KS. More seasonable temperatures are expected to return on Tue with highs in the mid and upper 80s for most areas.
Wed...Another shortwave trough is progged to sweep through the mean larger-scale trough over the Upper Mississippi Valley area on Wed driving another frontal boundary southward into the Central Plains in continued WNW mid/upper flow. There is decent agreement that the frontal zone will bisect our forecast area on Wed afternoon providing a focus for deep moist convection. What stands out with this system is the STRONG mid-level flow progged to arrive late Wed afternoon with 80+ knots progged to nose into the Central Plains at H5. The ECMWF indicates a 3-4 sigma anomaly at H5 for wind speed which is generally considered very unusual to extreme. It's relatively rare and in the upper tail of climatology for this time of year. Some downslope effects could help boost temperatures, especially in central KS as a dryline sharpens but with 70+ dewpoints lingering across the Flint Hills into southeast Kansas the NBM MaxT is likely overdone for southeast KS and CONSRAW was blended to trend in that direction for Wed afternoon. As the cap weakens, storms are expected to unzip along the frontal zone by late aftn/early evening but they are expected to struggle with westward extent as we move into central KS as warm H7 air is expected to provide a stout cap. Severe storms appear likely Wed evening, especially for areas east of I-135.
A stable post-frontal regime will arrive late Wed night into Thu while lingering into Fri with rising heights/increasing thickness late in the week allowing temperatures to quickly moderate on Friday while dry conditions prevail through the period.
Mid/Upper ridging on Saturday may break down on Sunday as a shortwave trough is progged to emerge from the Rockies bringing increasing chances for showers and storms late Sat into Sun. Seasonably mild temperatures are anticipated over the weekend.
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/
Issued at 1206 PM CDT Sun Jun 14 2026
VFR conditions are expected to prevail at all sites through the end of the period. North/northeast winds currently observed across the area will weaken this afternoon and become light and variable overnight before turning to the south by Monday morning.
ICT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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