Lexington, Massachusetts, USA
Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 300 PM EDT Fri Apr 10 2026 Valid 00Z Sat Apr 11 2026 - 00Z Mon Apr 13 2026 ...Heavy mountain snow in the Sierra Nevada this weekend... ...Above average temperatures to spread across much of the central and eastern U.S. through early next week... ...Severe thunderstorms and heavy rain possible across the southern Plains Saturday and Sunday... An increasingly active weather pattern is expected across the western and central U.S. this weekend. A couple of Pacific frontal systems will push across the West with widespread precipitation chances, including rain and mountain snow. Heavy mountain snow is expected in the Sierra Nevada through this weekend, especially late Saturday into Sunday as the second system moves onshore in California. Snow totals will likely reach 2-4 feet, which will create dangerous travel conditions. In the central and eastern U.S., a frontal boundary is expected to stall across the southern Plains, Mid-Mississippi Valley, and Mid-Atlantic tonight, then lift back north as a warm front this weekend. Broad southerly flow will develop across the south-central U.S., which will bring warm, moist air up from the Gulf and support a warming trend across the eastern two-thirds of the nation. High temperatures are expected to rise into the 80s across the north-central U.S., about 15-25 degrees above average for this time of year. With warm, moist air in place, conditions in the south-central U.S. will be favorable for severe thunderstorm development this weekend. Showers and storms are expected to spread from the southern Plains to the Midwest, with scattered severe thunderstorms possible across portions of the southern Plains, where the Storm Prediction Center has issues Slight Risks (level 2/5) for Saturday and Sunday. Severe wind gusts and hail are expected to be the primary threats. Storms may also produce locally heavy rainfall that may lead to scattered instances of flash flooding. Dolan Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php