Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Grand Forks, ND

Current Version |  Previous Version |  Text Only |  Print | Product List |  Glossary Off
Versions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
-- Remove Highlighting --
-- Discussion containing changed information from previous version are highlighted. --
945 FXUS63 KFGF 231505 AFDFGF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Grand Forks ND 1005 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are expected today between 4 pm and 10 pm south of Highway 2. Potential hazards include hail up to two inches and 70 mph winds, with a tornado possible. - Heavy rain tonight into Friday over portions of the Red River basin may contribute to additional rises on area rivers. - Patchy frost is possible Saturday early morning in the Devils Lake basin. Temperatures depend on cloud cover and wind. && .UPDATE...
-- Changed Discussion --
Issued at 1005 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Tweaked POPs a bit for current radar trends, as there continues to be two bands of rain across the CWA, one just north of the Highway 2 corridor and another near the I-94 area. These bands should continue to lift northeastward through the rest of the morning. Still thinking that the more intense convection will be moving into southeastern ND around 21Z or so, so will continue to monitor the instability trends as the afternoon goes on. UPDATE Issued at 704 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Model data and CAMs since 08z have shown little overall change to the anticipated conditions later this afternoon. Main question will remain where surface boundary sets up and initiation of convection, which still looks to be in between Aberdeen and Bismarck on the North Dakota side of the border. Did though expand likely pops for showers and they remain pretty numerous in the area near or just north of Highway 2 this morning. There is a break farther west, west of Minot and Bismarck so do think there is a break coming later this morning.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .DISCUSSION...
-- Changed Discussion --
Issued at 328 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 To start today, there is a weak short wave moving east-northeast into central ND. There is a broad area of mid level moisture and light rain showers with this wave in central and northern North Dakota back into northeast Montana and into southwest Manitoba. This entire area of showers will move east-northeast thru much of the area this morning, but linger most of the day northeast ND into far northwest MN. In this thicker cloud and shower area temps today will remain cool with highs in the 50s. Mainly talking about areas from Devils Lake to Roseau. Farther south early morning mid level showers will exit SE ND and the south valley by 16z. Some breaks in the mid clouds should occur midday into early aftn in SE ND. Our main player for thunderstorm development late afternoon and rain tonight into Friday will be a potent upper low that is moving thru central Idaho at 08z. This upper low will be in far NW South Dakota and SW North Dakota at 06z Fri. Models are in good agreement with this. Surface low will develop this afternoon and at 00z Fri be located in northwest South Dakota just east of the upper level low which at that time will be in NE Wyoming. Sfc low will deepen and winds in the sfc-850 mb layer will turn southerly and increase in speed this aftn. A weak sfc boundary at 08z was located from central MN near St cloud west thru far northern SD. This boundary will strengthen this afternoon and move north as a surface warm front. 850 mb warm front as well will develop. The location of both of these fronts will play a key role in thunderstorm evolution by 21/22z. Using HREF and other CAMs surface warm front looks to set up from low pressure near Lemmon SD east-northeast toward Linton ND to Wahpeton ND into central MN. 850 mb front will be a bit north of this surface boundary closer to a Bismarck-Jamestown-Fargo- Park Rapids line. Looking over CAM forecast for t-storm development it looks like t-storms will form in between the surface warm front and 850 mb warm front...with storms SE of Bismarck 21/22z and then developing eastward toward Fargo area by 00z. Narrow zone of best low level wind shear and significant tornado parameters in the 1-2 range are in a very narrow zone in between the surface front and 850 mb front. Various CAMS, including the 00z NSSl indicated a narrow zone of 1-2 STP in that area form near Linton to Lisbon to near Fargo-Moorhead. This zone of where best environment where supercells will form will I`m sure shift a bit during the day in terms of model forecasts. Storms forming near the sfc boundary and just south of the 850 mb boundary are where the best conditions exist for supercells. You go much farther north of Fargo into the mid RRV the instability diminishing significantly and becomes highly elevated above 850 mb. South of the surface boundary as we head into NE SD low level shear is weaker as winds surface to 850 mb are south-southeast. As we go thru the day, the location of supercell potential development will continue to be monitored. The window for severe is roughly 22z-02z. Thereafter the 850 mb low level jet takes over to our south in parts of southern SD into Nebraska with focus for severe storms shifting south. Meanwhile though tonight into Friday 500 mb low moves northeast thru south central into northeast ND with rain on west side deformation zone Bismarck up thru Devils Lake-Langdon and more showers/t-storms east of the track. Temps profiles suggest some potential for a snow/rain mix Friday morning/midday in heaviest rain in deformation zone over the NW fcst area. Much depends on precipitation rate and actual dew point depressions and wet bulb. Turtle mountains being just a bit higher would be the more likely area to see at least a mix. Friday will see upper low go just west of Grand Forks with sfc low near Grand Forks. Location of these features and some CAM reflectivity progs indicate potential for low topped supercells just east of the sfc low in a part of NW MN. Also anytime you have upper low around some strange things can happen, i.e. funnels. Will not message this but something to keep in mind. Memorial Day weekend will see some chance for showers each day, though not a wash out weekend. Lingering 500 mb troughing and numerous embedded short waves moving thru will bring shower chances. Also Friday night, some frost potential exists in Devils Lake basin, Langdon areas. How low temps will go highly depends on cloud cover, and wind. If more clouds, wind then 36 more likely if clearing occurs then some locations in Towner, Cavalier counties may drop to near 32F.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 704 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Band of low clouds (IFR and LIFR) extend from Grand Rapids and Duluth MN west thru Bemidji and are moving southwest. The clouds have cleared out of Waskish but have moved into Thief River Falls and Fosston at 12z. This band of low level cloud cover should break up thru mid morning or at the very least move out of Bemidji and Thief River TAF sites but impact Park Rapids. Outside of this zone...VFR conditions with mid clouds and showers northeast/east central ND and moving into far NW MN. Mid clouds likely all day north of I-94 in ND while some clearing works into far SE ND midday/early aftn. Shower and t-storm development will occur in southern ND late aftn/eve and spread north/east as upper low moves thru into Friday. Conditions like to go widespread IFR either in ceilings or vsbys in rain/t-storms tonight across the area. East winds increasing to 15-20 kts gusts over 25 kts at times into tonight. && .FGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ND...None. MN...None. && $$ UPDATE...Riddle/JR DISCUSSION...Riddle AVIATION...Riddle