James Gustina
Supporter
The 2013 season seems to be making attempts at sticking around and getting me to un-mothball my chase gear. The past several 12/00Z runs of the GFS have been throwing out a decently sheared, mildly unstable environment over northwestern Oklahoma and very far southwest Kansas. A modestly deep cyclone (1006-1004 mb) over southeastern Colorado looks to be gradually deepen over the course of Monday afternoon into the evening with backing sfc winds ahead of the dryline that will sharpen by 00z and mix east to just past the OK/TX state line. The other good sign is the cold front stays well back from the dryline and doesn't actually get through Oklahoma until that Tuesday night. The SW H85s look like they'll be offset by the extreme veering between 850-700 mb with almost due westerly H7s. Except for that little hiccup, the shear profile looks very favorable with deep-layer shear aoa 45 knots if the current run of the GFS (00z) is correct. The most recent run doesn't give a very favorable thermo environment (max 1000 j/kg mixed-layer) but I'm not one for setting too much stock in the GFS's attempts to throw out CAPE values. Moisture shouldn't be a problem with low-60s progged to hit Wichita by 21Z or so. Moisture return looks like it'll be rapid the day of, which is probably what is making the GFS throw out low-CAPE values because of the cloud cover that'll likely accompany it. An essentially neutral/slightly negative trough should be going through New Mexico/Texas Panhandle around 00z with western OK right on the nose of that jet. With any luck it'll speed up a bit to make sure nightfall doesn't become a factor if storms do indeed go up.
All in all, something to watch but its gonna take a lot to get me out the door at this point.
All in all, something to watch but its gonna take a lot to get me out the door at this point.