textproduct: New Orleans/Baton Rouge
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
Updated at 525 PM CST Sat Mar 7 2026
- Temperatures will remain around 10-15 degrees above normal into the middle of next week. The hottest days appear to be Today, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Highs for most areas expected to approach or surpass record highs, along with the potential for record warm lows for some locations. - Showers and storms will be possible this afternoon into Sunday. A severe storm or two capable of damaging winds, hail up to 1", locally heavy rainfall, and a tornado cannot be ruled out especially in northwestern areas. Widespread showers and storms in association with a frontal boundary which could lead to flooding of poor drainage and urban areas.
- Dense fog of less than 1 nautical mile of visibility is possible in the cooler shelf waters of the Mississippi Coast late tonight. Dense fog cannot be ruled out for immediate coastal areas near the cooler shelf waters.
SHORT TERM
(This afternoon through Sunday) Issued at 1152 AM CST Sat Mar 7 2026
Ridging over the eastern Gulf and western Atlantic. Upper trough from Wisconsin to near San Diego, with the main impulses over Iowa and Baja California. At the surface, high pressure extended from near Bermuda across most of the northern Gulf. Low pressure was over Wisconsin with a cold front to another low center over southern Missouri, then southwestward into west Texas. A line of showers and thunderstorms, a few severe, was ahead of the cold front from West Tennessee into central Texas. Locally, skies were mostly cloudy across much of the area, with noon CST temperatures ranging from the upper 70s to mid 80s. Dew points were generally around 70 degrees.
The early morning LIX sounding showed an uncapped and unstable airmass, with precipitable water value of 1.36 inches. CAPE values were in excess of 2000 J/kg, and downdraft CAPE around 1000 J/kg. At this point, shear was very limited.
Much of the afternoon will see scattered showers and perhaps a rumble or two of thunder. The main threat of convection will shift southeastward with the frontal boundary tonight. Main concerns will be hail and wind, but the tornado threat is non- zero. Heavy rain could produce a quick 1-2 inches of rainfall, but unless it falls in a very short time, widespread problems aren't anticipated through sunrise Sunday.
Most of the mesoscale modeling indicates that the overnight round of convection will be offshore by 12z Sunday. However, there are a couple of solutions that reinvigorate convection along Interstate 10 to our west Sunday morning. While this wouldn't be expected to be a severe weather threat, it could raise some issues regarding rainfall if we get another 1-2 inches of rain on top of the overnight rain. Any rain should end prior to sunset Sunday.
Much above normal temperatures will continue through the remainder of the weekend. At first glance, forecast lows would appear too cool tonight, but with convection expected to move through the area overnight, will assume that slightly drier air mixes down behind the convection. Some concern about fog development overnight if convection is slow to arrive. At this point, won't rule out fog, but confidence not high enough for advisories.
LONG TERM
(Sunday night through Friday) Issued at 1152 AM CST Sat Mar 7 2026
Upper ridging will build back over the area for the early part of the workweek. Could be scattered showers Monday, but Tuesday looks dry. An upper trough passage Wednesday or Wednesday night will bring another round of showers and thunderstorms to the area at that point, and we'll have to monitor for an additional threat of severe weather/heavy rainfall. That system will bring a brief period of cooler air to the area, which will take high temperatures back to around normal, closer to 70 degrees. There will be at least one much cooler night (Thursday night) where much of the area will see lows in the 40s. By next Saturday, highs are likely to be pushing 80 degrees again.
AVIATION
(00Z TAFS) Issued at 525 PM CST Sat Mar 7 2026
VIS and CIG reductions (IFR/MVFR) will be likely across the region tonight through Sunday morning as showers and thunderstorms develop and move through the region. Convection will not be constant, but intermittent SHRAs and TSs will be likely. Winds around convection will be a bit erratic as well, but generally a southerly flow outside of convection will continue. Additional showers will be possible Sunday afternoon and early evening, but at this juncture these will be more scattered in nature. Finally, most terminals will improve as this cycle ends with VFR conditions developing at or just after 09/00z. (Frye)
MARINE
Issued at 1152 AM CST Sat Mar 7 2026
Onshore southeasterly flow will continue through the weekend averaging generally around 10 to 15 knots or so. Conditions will remain favorable for areas of coastal fog for nearshore waters on Sunday morning particularly for the Mississippi Coast, but concerns with timing of approaching thunderstorms limits confidence in fog development enough to forego advisory issuance for now. Otherwise, daily isolated to scattered shower/storm chances will remain possible each day closer to nearshore areas, with a greater risk of thunderstorm impacts to the marine waters on Sunday into Monday. Onshore southeasterly flow is expected to persist through atleast the middle of the new workweek next week.
LIX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
LA...None. GM...None. MS...None. GM...None.
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