Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS La Crosse, WI

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711 FXUS63 KARX 301742 AFDARX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service La Crosse WI 1242 PM CDT Thu May 30 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Seasonal weather today with temperatures slowly warming into the upper 70s to low 80s for highs by Sunday and into early next week. - Periodic showers and storms Friday into Saturday. There is a potential for a narrow corridor of 1-3 inches of rain Friday afternoon and evening, but confidence in exact details is low. - No severe weather is expected through Saturday, but there exists a small severe weather signal for early next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 300 AM CDT Thu May 30 2024 Today/Tonight: Pleasant and Dry Given the larger evening T/Td spreads and deeper mixing heights yesterday, valley fog failed to form in most locales across the region this morning. With this forecast update, did scale back any mention of fog to just a few tributary valleys before sunrise. Early morning water vapor imagery depicts an omega blocking ridge axis centered along the MN/Dakota borders with anvil cirrus from upstream convection spilling over the 500-300-mb ridge and spreading downstream towards the forecast area. Mid to high clouds from this complex will gradually be on the increase through the day, but overall expect ample sunshine (especially east of the Mississippi River) today with high temperatures notching a few degrees warmer than yesterday as the lower tropospheric temperatures slowly increase in the wake of the departing near-surface high pressure cell. Friday - Saturday: Rainfall Details The first big question in the forecast revolves around the rainfall forecast for Friday into Saturday. A negatively- tilted shortwave driving the ongoing convection across the northern High Plains lifts into Canada as it carves out the western periphery of the aforementioned omega block. The upper level kinematic support likewise lifts northward of the region and results in the attendant surface boundary over MN slowing during the day on Friday and then stalling/lifting back northward Friday night in response to a second shortwave approaching from the west. How far southeast this boundary progresses on Friday is a source of forecast uncertainty with some convective allowing models pushing it into southeast MN/central WI whereas other guidance keeps it closer to the Twin Cities metro area. This southeastward push will be driven by the strength of the daytime convection, a difficult aspect of the forecast to nail down with much lead time given the already marginal environment in the narrow warm sector ahead of the front. Increasing isentropic ascent over the boundary in the evening hours on Friday ahead of this second shortwave should fuel a renewed rounds of storms with the possibility of a corridor of training cells and enhanced rainfall rates along a southwest to northeast axis. HREF member maximum QPF outputs show values within this narrow corridor of 1 to 3 inches, but vary in the placement of this 10-20 mile wide corridor by over 150 miles. Concerns also linger with the quality of the moisture within the already narrow and mixed warm sector with additional convection to the south possibly robbing the area of any further moisture return as we go through the night and into Saturday morning. Sunday - Tuesday: Additional Waves of Storms A quasi-zonal flow pattern settles in by the latter part of the weekend with a pair of amplified shortwaves knocking on our doorstep for Sunday night/Monday morning and Tuesday night. The evolution of the waves--most notably the latter wave for Tuesday--is a source of high model variability and thus instills lower confidence in the convective details of the forecast. Nevertheless, the reservoir of higher theta-e air will not be far away and could easily be tapped by these systems as they move through. The shear profiles and thus severe weather threat will be dictated by the orientation and position of the upper troughs and will be hashed out over the coming days. Bottom line is that the forecast for the early part of next week looks to be taking a more active turn. One aspect of the forecast that is of higher certainty is temperatures. With the zonal flow pattern in place, temperatures should hold steady in the upper 70s to low 80s for highs through midweek, though how the convection unfolds will drive temperatures to some degree and results in a widening of the guidance envelop beyond Monday. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z FRIDAY/...
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Issued at 1234 PM CDT Thu May 30 2024 VFR conditions are expected through this TAF period across the region. Timing of any precipitation impacts west of the Mississippi River has been pushed back, but did go with a VCSH at RST mid-morning Friday. Precipitation chances increase around 09Z for RST, but still remain low enough (10 to 20%) to not include in the TAF at this time. Best precipitation chances (50 to 60%) for RST come around 17Z Friday.
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&& .ARX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... WI...None. MN...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Skow AVIATION...JAW