On Friday, the cold and associated surface low was located in KS/NE, and with abundant gulf moisture in place, we were expected to have some pre-frontal precipitation in the form of heavy rain and storms train over the area for a few hours. The pre-frontal precip did form, but in very thin bands in western/northwestern Missouri. These dissipated overnight, and we didn't get a drop, which took our QPF down considerably.
Friday night and Saturday felt like a typical spring day with stormy weather coming. It was almost eerie. Our dew point temperature officially hit 60° at Columbia Regional Airport in the morning hours of Saturday.
Here was a snapshot of the dewpoint temperatures at around 10:00 a.m.
...and the air temperature at that same time.
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The front was at our doorstep by 10:10 a.m. as you can see in the radar graphic. The line of storms you see stretched from Mexico to Canada...truly a battlezone of airmasses.
A tornado warning was issued for Callaway county by 10:30 a.m. due to radar-indicated rotation, but no damage was reported in our county. There were two tornadoes reported just north of us in Audrain county, one of which destroyed a hangar and spread the debris 100 ft.
The storm dumped approx. 1.15" at this station.