textproduct: Shreveport

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KEY MESSAGES

Issued at 1222 AM CST Tue Feb 17 2026

- Increasing clouds overnight through this morning should limit fog coverage, but patchy fog still may develop in some areas. - Southerly winds will support a warming trend through much of this week with many areas approaching 80 degrees by mid week. - A cold front will arrive by the end of this week, then briefly stall out before shifting through the region with increasing rain chances by Friday through the first half of the weekend.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 1222 AM CST Tue Feb 17 2026

Both cirrus increasing from the west and low stratus surging north will continue to overspread the entire region through daybreak. As a result, this should serve to limit fog formation to just patchy in coverage as compared to 24 hours ago when fog was rather dense in most areas. Our northern zones across SE OK and SW AR are more likely to see patchy fog based on current temp/dew point spreads and little if any wind overnight. Farther south, southerly winds should gradually increase and keep the low levels slightly mixed. Otherwise, look for any patchy fog to quickly dissipate by mid to late morning while cloud cover will be slow to erode with mostly clouds skies likely lingering through the afternoon. Regardless, warm air advection aided by the increasing southerly winds will propel high temperatures into the upper 60s to mid 70s. Overnight low temperatures will not drop off all that much given the clouds and prevailing southerly winds with a range from mid 50s to lower 60s.

Expect the warming trend to extend through Wednesday and Thursday with widespread mid to upper 70s and lower 80s for afternoon high temperatures. A subtle shift in low-level flow becoming more SWly will further aid in these unseasonably warm temperatures, and this may also contribute to a return of elevated fire danger conditions after several days of drying out following last weekend's rainfall across the region.

Moving ahead to Thursday night and Friday, a Pacific cold front will begin to slowly approach our region before briefly becoming stationary. The boundary will be the primary focus for increasing rain chances on Friday through Saturday, eventually aided by an advancing shortwave shifting eastward out of the Rockies through the mid-section of the country. As a result, the stalled boundary will get reinforced SE and gradually advance through the region on Saturday with convection ending through Saturday night. A return to dry and more seasonable conditions will follow on Sunday into early next week with daily high temperatures in the 50s and 60s while overnight lows drop back into the 30s and 40s.

/19/

AVIATION

(12Z TAFS) Issued at 544 AM CST Tue Feb 17 2026

For the 17/12z TAF update...Seeing some drops in visibility this morning due to some patchy fog across portions of the area, nothing like what we saw on Monday morning though. Nonetheless, widespread MVFR to LIFR flight conditions prevail this morning at all terminals thanks to lower clouds and the patchy fog. Similar to yesterday, we should see some return of VFR conditions by this afternoon although we will keep hold on some cloud cover through the day, only to potentially do it all over again tonight with lower ceilings once again. /33/

SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT

Issued at 1222 AM CST Tue Feb 17 2026

Spotter activation is not expected through the end of this week.

/19/

PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS

SHV 73 61 78 63 / 0 0 0 0 MLU 70 59 78 61 / 0 0 0 0 DEQ 69 55 75 55 / 0 0 0 10 TXK 73 61 77 63 / 0 0 0 0 ELD 68 57 74 58 / 0 0 0 0 TYR 74 62 79 63 / 0 0 0 0 GGG 74 59 79 61 / 0 0 0 0 LFK 75 60 79 63 / 0 0 0 0

SHV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

AR...None. LA...None. OK...None. TX...None.


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