Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Milwaukee/Sullivan, WI

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345
FXUS63 KMKX 030944
AFDMKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Milwaukee/Sullivan WI
444 AM CDT Mon Jun 3 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Warm/muggy conditions prevail for the first half of this week.

- Showers and thunderstorms expected later this morning through
  this evening. There is a conditional (level 2 out of 5) risk
  for some severe thunderstorms this afternoon and evening, with
  wind and hail as the primary threats.

- Additional rounds of showers and thunderstorms Tuesday and
  Wednesday.

- Northwest winds bring cooler and drier air to southern
  Wisconsin for the second half of this week.

&&

.SHORT TERM...
Issued 440 AM CDT Mon Jun 3 2024

Today and Tonight:

An MCV currently over northwest Iowa will continue to drift
northeastward, working with disorganized nocturnal convection
to its north (SE Minnesota and northwest WI) to generate outflow
boundaries capable of triggering fresh convection further east
(over our CWA) late this morning into this afternoon. SBCAPE up
to 2000 joules this afternoon coupled with deep shear of 25 to
45 kts will be sufficient for some organized storm clusters,
with some strong to severe storms possible this afternoon and
evening. Upscale storm growth and clustering along both remnant
and fresh outflow boundaries could lead to training storms
(which impact the same area multiple times), capable of a flash
flood threat. Hail and damaging wind gusts would be the primary
severe weather threats. Isolated tornadoes cannot be ruled out
at this time. Storm coverage and intensity is likely to decrease
late tonight as instability dwindles.

Sheppard

&&

.LONG TERM...
Issued 440 AM CDT Mon Jun 3 2024

Tuesday through Sunday:

As southerly warm/moist advection continues at the surface,
another shortwave trough rotating through the 500mb pattern
could trigger warm sector convective initiation, leading to
scattered showers and thunderstorms late Tuesday afternoon (40
to 60% chance). However, model guidance suggests that more
organized storms will be lined up along the cold front to our
west, with 85% precip chances arriving late Tuesday evening
through Tuesday night. As the cold front completely crosses the
CWA Wednesday morning, precip chances begin a gradual decline
(30-60% in the morning), with only 15-30% chances for showers
and storms in the cool sector of the parent low pressure
(Wednesday afternoon).

Cool / dry air advection on northwesterly winds continues
through the end of the week, with daytime highs in the low to
mid 70s likely for all areas Thursday and onwards.

Sheppard

&&

.AVIATION...
Issued 440 AM CDT Mon Jun 3 2024

VFR conditions continue early this morning, with showers and
thunderstorms gradually developing and approaching from the
southwest, with arrival timing and chances reflected in the
TAFs. In the event storms arrive late this morning (western
airports only, KMSN and KJVL) they are unlikely to be severe,
but may produce sub-severe localized wind gusts and lightning.
Some strong to severe storms are possible (all areas) this
afternoon and evening, with damaging wind gusts, hail, and
frequent lightning as the primary threats. Broken cumulonimbus
cloud bases are likely to remain VFR altitude (generally 4000
ft) for the earliest storms, then gradually lower towards
3000-ft MVFR levels later in the event, perhaps 2000-ft or lower
for areas that see repeated hits from thunderstorms (mid-
afternoon through evening).

As shower and thunderstorm coverage decreases tonight, lingering
clouds at 3,000 to 10,000 ft are expected. In the event that
gaps can form in these clouds, fog formation will be possible,
and a few patches of dense fog cannot be ruled out. Only 15 to
25% precip and thunder chances for the late tonight period (may
be excluded from TAFs depending on confidence level).

Sheppard

&&

.MARINE...
Issued 440 AM CDT Mon Jun 3 2024

An area of low pressure over southern Alberta to the northern
Great Plains deepens to around 29.2 inches today, then drifts
northeastward into Ontario through Wednesday. Southerly winds
develop today, continuing though Tuesday night. Then a cold front
crosses Lake Michigan Wednesday, causing winds to veer westerly.
Westerly winds look to continue through the end of the week as the
meandering low over south- central Canada weakens to around 29.4
inches.

Expect periods of showers and thunderstorms from this afternoon
through Wednesday. With humid air moving in from the south today
and tonight, fog may develop late tonight through early Tuesday
over the waters, and patches of dense fog are possible. Model
guidance suggests that northwestern areas of Lake MI will be
most susceptible to fog formation.

Sheppard

&&

.MKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
WI...None.
LM...None.
&&

$$

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