Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Des Moines, IA

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463
FXUS63 KDMX 200813
AFDDMX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Des Moines IA
313 AM CDT Thu Jun 20 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Rain focusing primarily northeast through this morning. Non-
  zero chance of redevelopment this afternoon. Main round of
  rain arrives in the north tonight.

- Rain lingers in the north through the day Friday and becomes
  more intense for the overnight. Some storms strong to severe
  with gusty winds and hail early on. Heaviest rain looks to
  remain in MN at this time.

- Another push of rain and storms Saturday with some storms
  becoming strong to severe. Dry period expected at least
  through Monday with temperatures returning to near 90 degrees.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 308 AM CDT Thu Jun 20 2024

A stalled out front remained over southeast Iowa overnight. With
high pressure to the north, LLJ moisture was redirected into the
Northern Plains and away from the front. Despite the weak
kinematics, plenty of moisture and some instability allowed for some
showers and storms to fire off the front overnight. With 2 inch
PWATS, thunderstorms along this line could produce localized amounts
up to a half inch as they lift northeast through the morning.
Moisture transport will remain focused west of the state today which
will work to keep most of the area dry today. Cannot completely rule
out some precipitation along the boundary in central Iowa today as
diurnal destabilization takes place, but confidence is low (<20%)
due to the lack of synoptic forcing nearby. At the very least, cloud
cover will linger along the front today and make high temperatures
underperform. Have lowered high temperatures to reflect this
possibility with cool sector sites in the upper 70s to low 80s. The
southeast will have the least residence time of the front today and
will be allowed to rise into the mid 80s this afternoon.

For tonight, the LLJ strengthens and generates an MCS across
Nebraska. This MCS will follow along the instability gradient
which will be somewhere near the IA-MN border, per model
consensus. The northern extent will depend on how far north the
boundary gets today. The LLJ will also veer eastward overnight
tonight, adding to the heavy rain potential through the day
Friday. Right now, model consensus keeps the heaviest rain in
southern Minnesota, but local convective elements can alter the
final location of boundaries, meaning a heavy rain scenario in
northern Iowa cannot be completely discarded. In what feels like
a broken record this week, the cold pool will drop the boundary
into Iowa with rain chances lingering in northern Iowa
throughout Friday. Have also lowered highs Friday in response,
but expecting rain cooled areas in the north to have highs lower
than currently forecasted. The LLJ will angle across the state
overnight Friday with the highest precipitation occurring along
the aforementioned front. At this point, synoptic forcing from
an approaching lee side cyclone will increase coverage. Shear
will also increase beneath the influence of the jet, so some
storms could become severe with primarily damaging winds and
hail early in the evening. Primary threat will transition to
primarily heavy rain overnight. The LLJ from the southwest will
shove the boundary north through the night, with current model
output keeping its residence time in Iowa fairly short. Far
northern counties could see 1-2 inches of rain with locally
higher amounts with higher amounts remaining in MN. Trends will
continue to be monitored.

The upper level ridge will begin to pivot westward this weekend,
allowing the low to trek northeast Saturday. Its trailing cold front
will move across Iowa. Instability will build ahead of the front.
Deep layer shear of around 30kts will aid in organization and make
some strong to severe storms possible. As for the threat of heavy
rain, this round will be more progressive in nature, keeping
rainfall amounts under an inch (some higher amounts from
thunderstorms). We will be afforded a dry period to into early next
week until the ridge nestles over the desert southwest and opens up
the Gulf to the Plains next week. The southwest flow during this
time, barring rain chances, will push highs back to near 90
degrees.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/...
Issued at 1148 PM CDT Wed Jun 19 2024

No dramatic changes within this TAF issuance. Chances for
thunder remain relatively low, so have limited precipitation
mentions to VCSH mainly in/around KDSM/KOTM/KALO. More pertinent
will be the MVFR/IFR ceiling progression across the area as hi-
res guidance continues to suggest expansion and northward lift
through the period. Have continued to hold back on the most
aggressive (IFR) depictions and kept current prevailing mentions
to MVFR. That will need to be monitored though as there is an
area of IFR ceilings over southern Iowa and northern Missouri,
just uncertain how expansive that will truly become.

&&

.HYDROLOGY...
Issued at 213 PM CDT Wed Jun 19 2024

Not much response from last nights rainfall over the area and today
we have received only light amounts in the south. Will need to
monitor northern Iowa next 3 to 4 days as increasing risk of
moderate or locally heavy rainfall over portions of northwest Iowa;
particularly near the West Fork Des Moines River Basin.  Thursday
and Friday into Saturday may bring sufficient rainfall to push some
areas back into minor flood stage over the weekend.

&&

.DMX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Jimenez
AVIATION...Curtis
HYDROLOGY...REV