Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS La Crosse, WI

Home |  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
720
FXUS63 KARX 221824
AFDARX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service La Crosse WI
124 PM CDT Sat Jun 22 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- One more round of heavy rain is possible this afternoon and
evening, with some areas potentially picking up another 2 to 4
inches of rain, with the southern third of the area having the
higher relative risk for additional heavy rain.

- Severe thunderstorms remain possible, again mainly in the southern
third of the CWA. Damaging winds remain the primary threat, but a
tornado or two cannot be ruled out.

- After a welcome respite from the rain Sunday and Monday,
  Monday night and Tuesday may feature additional thunderstorms.
  Monday night has a Slight Risk (level 2 of 5) for severe
  thunderstorms.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 120 PM CDT Sat Jun 22 2024

This Afternoon and Evening: Heavy Rain and Flooding, Severe Storm
Potential

18z WV satellite shows an upper trough sliding eastward over W MN
with an area of thunderstorms ahead of this feature. Multiple weak
perturbations are seen in the west-southwesterly flow aloft over the
CWA and extending back toward NE. At the surface, quasi-stationary
front is draped across IA with this feature extending into NE IA/SW
WI. Skies are beginning to modestly clear in NE IA with the
exception of a small area of showers along the US 20 corridor just
to the south of the CWA.

This afternoon, expect yet another round of showers and
thunderstorms to develop in the vicinity of the quasi-stationary
front as a combination of low level convergence, destabilization due
to insolation, and a bit of a cooling aloft ahead of a shortwave
occurs. Additionally, a few showers and thunderstorms may develop in
the northwestern portions of the CWA as the main upper trough
arrives late this afternoon. Once again, the key detail will be
where exactly the surface front will be located for our initial
shower and thunderstorm development this afternoon. Due to the
influence of outflow from our morning storms, only expect the
surface front to push as far north as roughly a Charles City IA to
Richland Center WI axis. With MLCAPE building to 1500 J/kg along and
south of this boundary, 0-6km shear increasing to 35-50 knots as
winds aloft increase, and sfc-500m SRH increasing to 50-100 m2/s2,
both damaging winds and perhaps a tornado or two would be possible
with the thunderstorms. The tornado risk, while present, looks to be
brief as upscale growth should occur relatively quickly as the 0-6km
bulk shear vectors look to be oriented largely along the the axis of
the front. This upscale growth, storm motions out of the west, and
PWAT values continuing to run near or above climatological maximums
suggest that another round of high rain totals and flooding will be
the main risk with the thunderstorms that develop near the surface
front in NE IA and SW WI.

In summary, this afternoon brings a risk for additional flooding,
damaging winds, and perhaps a tornado or two to NE IA and SW WI.
Farther to the northwest, scattered showers and thunderstorms may
occur. With the risk for additional flooding with this activity
being lower due to the progressive movement of the upper trough,
have allowed a large portion of the Areal Flood Watch to expire.

Monday and Tuesday: Next Round of Thunderstorm Potential

Monday into Tuesday, a longwave upper trough looks to advance from
the Canadian Prairies to northern Ontario. With high pressure
building in the eastern CONUS in the wake of an upper trough,
southerly 850mb moist advection looks to resume across the MS
Valley. While better shear and support for ascent looks to be
located to our north, still plausible severe thunderstorms could
occur in our forecast area either Monday night or Tuesday. Indeed,
SPC has issued a Slight Risk (level 2 of 5) for the northern third
of the area for Monday night. Will need to continue to monitor this
period, particularly if the upper trough digs a bit farther south
than currently favored.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SUNDAY/...
Issued at 1226 PM CDT Sat Jun 22 2024

MVFR ceilings will persist into the evening. There is still some
uncertainty on whether the TAF sites will be impacted a two
shortwave troughs moving through the area from mid-afternoon
into the evening, so kept the visibilities VFR. There may be
some scattered strong to severe storms south of the TAF sites.

Skies will be IFR/MVFR tonight and then become scattered on
Sunday morning.

&&

.HYDROLOGY...
Issued at 124 PM CDT Sat Jun 22 2024

Have cancelled additional parts of the Areal Flood Watch in
southeast Minnesota and west-central Wisconsin as the heavy rain
threat appears diminished for these areas. However, with
additional heavy rainfall possibly bringing another 2 to 4
inches this afternoon across northeast Iowa and southwest
Wisconsin, the Areal Flood Watch continues for these areas
through this evening.

River flooding concerns will last well into next week and
multiple rivers could exceed moderate flood stage if the
rainfall lines up correctly in their basins. Abundant rainfall
fell in the Cedar River basin around Austin, leading to major
flooding in this area. This appears likely to cause major
flooding downstream at Charles City, with exact crest height
dependent on how much additional rainfall falls in the basin
this afternoon.

&&

.ARX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
WI...Flood Watch until 7 PM CDT this evening for WIZ043-044-053>055-
     061.
MN...None.
IA...Flood Watch until 7 PM CDT this evening for IAZ008>011-018-019-
     029-030.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Ferguson
AVIATION...Boyne
HYDROLOGY...Ferguson