textproduct: Springfield

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

- There is high confidence in above-average temperatures today through early next week.

- Dry weather will persist through at least Monday afternoon.

- Probabilities favor above-average temperatures and above- average precipitation in the Feb 12th to 18th period.

SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/

Issued at 101 AM CST Thu Feb 5 2026

Synoptic Overview:

A low-level stratus deck was aligned down the Missouri/Kansas border early this morning with clear skies to the east. Water vapor imagery nicely showed a positively tilted upper-level trough axis cutting through the Tennessee and Ohio valleys with an amplified ridge over the western CONUS.

The Warmup Begins Today:

As the trough pivots east of Missouri, a warmer airmass will advect into the region. Areas east of Highway 65 will be the slowest to warm and may still see temperatures fail to climb out of the 40s today, but for locations across western Missouri and southeast Kansas, afternoon temperatures in the 50s will be common.

A separate, weak shortwave impulse will transit the Midwest this afternoon, and the associated surface frontal boundary will aid in the development of some modestly breezy winds. West-southwest winds will gust to 25 to 30 mph today, particularly for locations west of the Highway 65 corridor.

LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/

Issued at 101 AM CST Thu Feb 5 2026

Above-average Temperatures through the Long Term:

As the aforementioned upper-level ridge shifts east late this week, much of the central U.S. will experience a period of warmer than average temperatures. A passing shortwave and weak cold front look to suppress the warm air advection somewhat on Saturday, resulting in high temperatures similar to today's. Beyond that, however, there is high confidence in much-above normal temperatures early next week. In fact, there's even some signal in the ECMWF's Extreme Forecast Index for high temperatures on Monday. Ensembles have continued to trend warmer with their temperatures over the last 2-3 forecast cycles through this period, too. Thus, the question is not if we will warm up--but rather, how much? At this point, the primary driver of the ensemble temperature spreads is the magnitude/strength of the upper-level ridge. A deeper ridge would tend to mean warmer temperatures; NBM 75th percentile highs are in the mid to upper 60s on Sunday and in the 70s areawide on Monday and Tuesday. Conversely, 25th percentile temperatures are in the upper 50s to low 60s on Sunday and in the 60s areawide on Monday and Tuesday.

Dry through Monday:

The warmup will initially be accompanied by a period of dry weather as the Missouri Ozarks remain with a lack of lift and/or under dry northwest flow aloft. Precipitation chances remain less than 10% through Monday afternoon. However, ensembles want to close off and upper-level low over the Pacific southwest on Friday and keep it there until early next week. Guidance then shows that low transitioning to an open wave and finally shifting east sometime Monday into Tuesday. As it does so, the resultant lift and moisture return will manifest rain chances. Extended global guidance does suggest the possibility that this pattern change may usher in a more active stretch of weather as we head into the middle of the month, but details remain sparse, and it is far too early to latch onto any one deterministic solution.

AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/

Issued at 1100 PM CST Wed Feb 4 2026

VFR conditions are expected through much if not all of the TAF period. A stratus deck aligned down western Missouri may occasionally drop to MVFR levels early this morning, but otherwise is expected to stay just above the 3000 ft threshold.

Winds will remain light this morning before increasing in the afternoon, occasionally gusting between 20 to 25 kt from the west.

SGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

KS...None. MO...None.


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