451 FXUS01 KWBC 171957 PMDSPD Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 357 PM EDT Fri Jul 17 2026 Valid 00Z Sat Jul 18 2026 - 00Z Mon Jul 20 2026 ...Heavy rainfall threat continues in the Texas Big Bend today; dangerous flash flooding remains possible... ...Daily monsoonal showers and thunderstorms continue across the Western U.S. this weekend; stormy weather expected over parts of the Northern Tier and Mid-Atlantic ...Air quality alerts span from the Upper Midwest Great Lakes to New England... ...Heat and humidity persists across the Northern Plains/Upper Midwest; lingers in the Mid-Atlantic through tomorrow... A slow-moving weather regime continues across the Southern Tier states as an upper-level low near the Texas Big Bend slowly retrogrades towards the Desert Southwest. This upper-level low (one key ingredient in the catastrophic Texas flash flooding) is forecast to meander northwestward today, which will lessen the coverage of showers and thunderstorms in central Texas this weekend. The slow nature of this feature unfortunately means that scattered pockets of very heavy rain remain possible near the Texas Big Bend, which would exacerbate the dangerous flooding from the last few days of extreme rainfall. Monsoonal thunderstorms capable of isolated to scattered severe weather flash flooding are forecast to track from north to south across the Four Corners region through tomorrow under the influence of the aforementioned southern High Plains upper-low. Along the Northern Tier, a transitory frontal system will also drive daily showers and thunderstorms this weekend, some of which could produce scattered severe weather from the Ohio Valley into the Mid-Atlantic tomorrow. Hot and humid conditions expected to persist across the Great Lake and Northern Plains for several days with daily highs in the 90s to lower 100s expected. Smoke continues to disperse from the Minnesota and Canadian wildfires downstream into the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions resulting in poor Air quality. Meanwhile, another day of triple-digit high temperatures and elevated humidity is expected for the northern Mid-Atlantic today before temperatures moderate with the frontal passage this weekend. Asherman/Campbell Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php $$