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State of the Chase Season 2026

I realize this may not have any scientific validity whatsoever, although I do remember @Jeff Duda several years ago mentioning something to the effect there are only so many troughs we can realistically expect the atmosphere to generate over time, and a lot of early activity can in fact exhaust the potential for later. I could very well be mischaracterizing this, so don’t quote me. Hopefully Jeff can comment, and offer the latest thinking on the subject, since that was a number of years ago. But as you can see the concept stuck with me and makes me worry every year that I see early activity! 😏
Ha, I remember that discussion from some years ago. Also, I cannot defend that position with scientific data - as far as I'm aware there is no "budget" for troughs that the atmosphere obeys. It just seems to be a sense I have.

So here we are again...if there's going to be a quiet period between March and June I'd rather have it in March. Let's see if it gives way to an active period during a time of year where the days are longer, warmer temperatures are more likely, and we're less likely to see Gulf-clearing cold fronts.
 
Looks quiet in the near-term as a dominant western U.S. ridge shuts the pattern down and allows for an early spring heat wave to expand from the western U.S. into the Plains through late March. Possible there could be a few shortwaves embedded within a period of flattern zonal flow March 24-31 that allow for a crashing-cold-front style storm opportunity somewhere in the Midwest during that time frame but I'm mostly turning my attention to early April at this point. Not much to get excited about with respect to specifics, but global ensembles and other teleconnections are starting to flicker in the first half of April.

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I rambled a little more about it in a new blog here if you want to lean in: SKYDRAMA.NET • Pattern Quiets Down - Next Run of Severe Storms in Early April?

For some reason I didn't get the bell notifications for new posts in this thread starting with this one even though I'm supposedly "watching" it (I'm getting them for other "watched" threads such as the "THAT'S A LOT" one), but I'd certainly take this since I'm on the Founder's Tour for Trey Greenwood's Storm Chaser Coaching project which runs April 3-12. I knew it was a bit of a gamble going that early, but for that reason that tour was less expensive, and there have been plenty of years (including some recent) where May hasn't been all it's cracked up to be.
 
I'm on the Founder's Tour for Trey Greenwood's Storm Chaser Coaching project which runs April 3-12.
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Andy, not too difficult to figure that you'll likely travel somewhere south & east of Nebraska most of the time for that trip this year!

While I don't know of any correlation between precipitation totals & severe weather, evapotranspiration's definitely lowered in most of the Cornhusker State. Areas such as the above went from moderate to severe to extreme on the Drought Severity Index during the last month.

"Islands in the stream," my photo, shows crisp vegetation & prior, higher levels carved into the creek channel, especially during flooding.
 
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Andy, not too difficult to figure that you'll likely travel somewhere south & east of Nebraska most of the time for that trip this year!

While I don't know of any correlation between precipitation totals & severe weather, evapotranspiration's definitely lowered in most of the Cornhusker State. Areas such as the above went from moderate to severe to extreme on the Drought Severity Index during the last month.

This pic gives a feel for the "crispy" vegetation as well as some of the prior, higher levels carved into the channel, especially during flooding.

In my experience drought is generally not good for severe weather. 2011-'12 had one of the mildest and least snowy winters here in southern Wisconsin in my memory, leading to a very warm and dry late winter/early spring (frequently referenced as the "Morch" on another weather forum I frequent). 2012 ended up being one of the quieter tornado seasons for the Plains, apart from the big outbreak on April 14, and the Midwest was even quieter with a grand total of four tornadoes in Wisconsin all year (average 21-23 depending on the source).

However that was an extreme example. While we were below-average on snowfall for much of this past winter, the recent winter storm last weekend gave us a nice snowpack which is now melting off. However I'm not a huge fan of the much above normal temperatures that are going to be over the Southwest for the next week or two. Could create some EML issues.
 
However I'm not a huge fan of the much above normal temperatures that are going to be over the Southwest for the next week or two. Could create some EML issues.
Interestingly enough, drought conditions in the Southwest are actually a lot better than you would expect. Looking at the drought conditions across North America as a whole indicates that the EML source region is doing a lot better than in 2012 and even 2025, especially across northern Mexico. However, these maps are from the end of February so we'll have to see how the current heat wave affects things.
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That said, drought conditions will probably worsen quite a bit given this month's extremely warm and dry conditions. If you're using 2012 as an analog the current conditions in the West have the potential to be much, much worse (snowmelt is currently occurring significantly earlier than in 2012). What concerns me more than EML conditions is the persistence of drought across tornado alley itself. Drought is currently much more widespread there than it was in 2012, and is forecast to remain in place or worsen over the next few months.
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It's very interesting that many chasers and severe weather aficionados acknowledge drought can impact a spring season, yet the interpretation of how and where seems to differ widely. Like Harlan U above, I'm always more interested in soil moisture conditions on the Plains than I am way out in the Great Basin or Sonoran Desert. And in that respect, it's pretty bleak right now, especially in the southern Plains (where IME drought conditions can matter even more than up north).

Of course, soil moisture conditions looked somewhat bleak in March-April in two of the last three years (2023 and 2025), and both of those rallied to become good-to-great chase seasons by late May into June:

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That has not been the norm historically, though. It would be surprising if we pull a mid-season rabbit out of the hat yet again this year with soaking rains in April or early May, but obviously that's not impossible. My baseline expectation is a season that looks more like some blend of 2006, 2009, and 2018, meaning many marginal/weak flow setups will be kneecapped by deep PBL mixing in the afternoon (especially the farther south and west you go)... and we'll be more reliant on "big trough" setups and fortuitous boundary setups to overcome the unfavorable background state. CPC's latest seasonal outlook certainly supports this, as it really couldn't look much worse.

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That has not been the norm historically, though. It would be surprising if we pull a mid-season rabbit out of the hat yet again this year with soaking rains in April or early May, but obviously that's not impossible. My baseline expectation is a season that looks more like some blend of 2006, 2009, and 2018, meaning many marginal/weak flow setups will be kneecapped by deep PBL mixing in the afternoon (especially the farther south and west you go)... and we'll be more reliant on "big trough" setups and fortuitous boundary setups to overcome the unfavorable background state. CPC's latest seasonal outlook certainly supports this, as it really couldn't look much worse.

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Explains why 2018 was such an all-around lousy year, as you had that coupled with an anemic jet stream pattern that resulted in a near-total lack of those "big trough" setups.
 
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