Lexington, Massachusetts, USA
Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 245 PM EST Wed Feb 25 2026 Valid 00Z Thu Feb 26 2026 - 00Z Sat Feb 28 2026 ...Critical Fire weather conditions continue in the Southern Plains through the end of the day... ...Clipper system to bring Lake Effect snow to the Northeast, and showers and thunderstorms to the Southeast beginning on Thursday... ...Warm temperatures and dry conditions continue for much of the West, before precipitation returns in the Northern Plains and Rockies in the wake of a frontal system to end the week... In the Northwest, drier conditions are expected to continue for the next few days as an upper-level ridge moves in, with the exception of upslope flow bringing wintry precipitation in parts of Washington. To accompany the dry weather out West, well above-average temperatures are expected to continue across much of the West, into the Plains states, before moving into the Southeast. Temperatures in the Southwest and Southern Plains will be especially warm for this time of the year, with locations in Arizona, southern Texas, and southeast California exceeding 90 degrees. The combination of drier weather and gusty winds in parts of the Plains has resulted in the Storm Prediction Center issuing a Critical Fire Weather Risk, with Red Flag warnings expected to continue through early this evening. Meanwhile further east, a pair of frontal systems will continue to bring snow and wintry precipitation downwind of the Great Lakes through Thursday. This will bring a few more inches of snow accumulation to parts of the Northeast after last weekendâ€s winter storm. The associated front is then forecast to extend down into the South and Southeast, bringing along with it showers and thunderstorms beginning on Thursday morning. The front will then continue its way southeastward, as far south as Florida, with showers and thunderstorms expected to end the work week. Early into the weekend, a secondary clipper is anticipated to dive out of the Canadian Rockies and bring upslope snowfall in the Northern Rockies and Northern Plains. Early weekend impacts associated with this event are currently expected to remain relatively minor, but it will result in a return of precipitation to the Northern Plains, the Northern Rockies, the Intermountain West, and parts of the Central Great Basin. Blanco-Alcala/Asherman Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php