Ben Holcomb
EF5
The GFS and now the NAM has been showing some decent potential for a unusual late season setup in central and eastern Oklahoma for a couple days now. Complicating factors include overnight and ongoing morning convection, but a small shortwave passing atop what should be a very moist and unstable environment should kick off a decent round of storms.
Questions on storm mode and timing are all still a bit in the air and probably will have to wait until day of, but there's a decent possibility of an outflow boundary to deal with. High surface temps and LCL's to the south along the red river, a strong cap to the SW and some wonky surface flow as depicted by todays 12Z NAM can all throw a wrench in the setup. With that said, seeing a sub 1000mb low in June, especially in the southern plains, is always attention getting. I would not be surprised to see at least one photogenic tube come from this event in Oklahoma.
Questions on storm mode and timing are all still a bit in the air and probably will have to wait until day of, but there's a decent possibility of an outflow boundary to deal with. High surface temps and LCL's to the south along the red river, a strong cap to the SW and some wonky surface flow as depicted by todays 12Z NAM can all throw a wrench in the setup. With that said, seeing a sub 1000mb low in June, especially in the southern plains, is always attention getting. I would not be surprised to see at least one photogenic tube come from this event in Oklahoma.