355 FXUS01 KWBC 030739 PMDSPD Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 238 AM EST Tue Mar 03 2026 Valid 12Z Tue Mar 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Mar 05 2026 ...Frontal system to bring showers and potentially strong thunderstorms between the southern Plains and Ohio Valley over the next few days, with a light wintry mix throughout the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast today... ...Potent cold front to cross the western U.S. and Rockies by midweek, producing gusty winds and mountain snowfall... ...Above average temperatures are forecast to become widespread across the Nation this week, with record-breaking warmth possible in the southern Plains today... An active weather pattern is in store for many locations between the southern Plains and Northeast over the next several days as a frontal boundary and waves of low pressure meander over the region. Only some of this expected precipitation is forecast to contain a wintry mix as the large-scale weather pattern turns warmer and more springlike. However, light sleet, freezing rain, and snow is expected beginning this morning across the central Appalachians and northern Mid-Atlantic before spreading into the Northeast this afternoon and eventually New England tonight. This wintry mix is expected to remain mostly light in magnitude, but still lead to areas of slippery travel. Elsewhere along this frontal boundary today, showers and thunderstorms are anticipated to develop from the southern Plains to the Ohio Valley. The repeating nature of some showers and thunderstorms may lead to over an inch of rainfall and isolated flash flooding across the Ohio Valley, with strong to severe thunderstorms possible from the Texas Panhandle to central Missouri. By Wednesday, a weak area of low pressure is forecast to develop along the aforementioned frontal boundary and push northeastward from the central/southern Plains to the Midwest. This will allow for a cold front to push further southeast across the southern Plains and clash with warm humid air lifting northward from the western Gulf of America. Thunderstorms forming along and ahead of this cold front could be severe from North Texas to the Ozarks, where the Storm Prediction Center has issued a Slight Risk (level 2/5) of severe weather. Meanwhile, additional rounds of showers and isolated thunderstorms are forecast throughout the Ohio Valley, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast into Thursday ahead of the next storm system ready to enter the central U.S. by the end of the week. First, this previously mentioned storm system will have to cross the western U.S. midweek as a potent fast-moving cold front containing gusty winds and mountain snowfall. This cold front is currently forecast to approach the Northwest Wednesday morning before cross the Intermountain West Thursday morning and reaching the Rockies by Thursday night. Heavy snow is possible in most mountain ranges spanning from the Cascades to the central Rockies, along with the potential for low elevation snowfall following the cold frontal passage. Even though the West experiences a cooldown through midweek, much of the central and eastern U.S. can expect above average temperatures to prevail. This is particularly the case by Thursday as widespread highs into the 70s span from the central Plains to the Mid-Atlantic. Highs into the 80s are forecast across the southern Plains today, which could break several daily records. This record warmth and afternoon temperatures soaring into the 80s will expand into the Southeast by Thursday as well. Meanwhile, these above average temperatures may struggle to reach into much of the Northeast as cloud cover and showers maintain highs in the 40s and 50s. Snell Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php $$