US Mesoscale Discussions

Storm Prediction Center Mesoscale Discussion 949

Published Date and Time: 2026-06-01 21:16:00



   Mesoscale Discussion 0949
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0753 PM CDT Mon Jun 01 2026

   Areas affected...extreme southwest Nebraska...much of western
   Kansas...and portions of northwest Oklahoma

   Concerning...Severe Thunderstorm Watch 265...

   Valid 020053Z - 020300Z

   The severe weather threat for Severe Thunderstorm Watch 265
   continues.

   SUMMARY...Severe thunderstorms with a history of strong winds and
   large hail continue across western Kansas this evening. The overall
   environment ahead of these storms remains very favorable for severe
   weather. As such, the severe threat will continue across Severe
   Thunderstorm Watch #265 and a new watch may be needed across
   portions of northwest Oklahoma and southwest/south-central Kansas
   later this evening.

   DISCUSSION...Multiple areas of thunderstorms are ongoing across
   Severe Thunderstorm Watch #265. The northern most severe storm is an
   isolated cell moving east along the Thomas/Logan County line.
   Although MRMS depicts maximum hail sizes between 1-1.5", a recent
   report from an EM in Logan County reports copious amounts of 0.88"
   hail rather than fewer, larger stones.

   To the southeast of this cell, an evolving linear cluster has taken
   shape from Lane to Gray Counties, with a southeast moving supercell
   occurring ahead of this line. A measured 80 MPH wind gust occurred
   earlier this evening over Lane County with the leading supercell,
   and a more recent report from Ness county indicates 1.75" hail is
   now or recently occurred. With the linear segment, a measured 61 MPH
   wind gust occurred as the linear moved across Scott County and a 70
   MPH wind gust reported by the Garden City ASOS.

   Additional severe storms have developed across far southwest Kansas
   across Morton and Grant Counties. MESH cores with the Morton cell
   continue to increase and wind damage was recorded in Johnson, KS as
   the Grant County cell moved through Stanton County.

   The overall environment ahead of these clusters remains very
   favorable for severe thunderstorms. MUCAPE increases from around
   2000 J/kg where the storms are now, to greater than 3500 J/kg across
   northwest Oklahoma into central Kansas. Effective-layer shear is
   also quite favorable, with widespread 35-40 knots objectively
   analyzed across the region. This should sustain ongoing convection
   and support severe potential with any new development.

   Recent observations and high-resolution guidance suggests that the 
   development linear MCS across Lane-to-Gray Counties will continue to
   develop south-southeast this evening. As mentioned, the overall
   environment ahead of these storms remains very favorable for large
   hail and damaging winds. As such, a new watch may be needed later
   this evening across portions of northwest Oklahoma and
   southwest/south-central Kansas.

   ..Marsh.. 06/02/2026

   ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...

   ATTN...WFO...ICT...OUN...GID...DDC...GLD...AMA...

   LAT...LON   37140199 39330198 39690106 39449949 38399843 36529793
               35769833 36049973 37140199 

   MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...UP TO 90 MPH
   MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...65-80 MPH
   MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...1.50-2.50 IN



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