


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS La Crosse, WI
Issued by NWS La Crosse, WI
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711 FXUS63 KARX 011826 AFDARX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service La Crosse WI 126 PM CDT Mon Sep 1 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Periodic rain chances throughout the remainder of the work week. Highest chances for rain will be Tuesday evening and into Wednesday (60-80% chance) as well as on Thursday night into Friday morning (40-60% chance). - Cooler than normal temperatures expected from Wednesday and into the weekend. Highs will likely remain in the middle 50s to upper 60s for most with overnight lows in the middle 30s to upper 40s. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 126 PM CDT Mon Sep 1 2025 Rest of Today - Wednesday: Shower/Storm Chances Tuesday & Wednesday Weak flow aloft today with surface high pressure situated to our southeast will keep skies mostly clear for much of today along with keeping temperatures fairly seasonable with highs in the middle to upper 70s. Cannot rule out a shower or two (under 15% chance) near the I-35 corridor in southeast MN later this afternoon as shown in a couple of the CAMs with a corridor of weak instability. However, with sounding profiles in the low-levels in the recent RAP/HRRR being very dry at KRST, this seems unlikely to occur. As we head into Tuesday and Tuesday night, two key features will be important to watch as a broad upper-level low pressure system begins to push into the area. The first of these will move through the region late Tuesday morning and into the early afternoon in the form of a pre-frontal shortwave. Overall depending on when convection manifests with this wave, cannot rule out some stronger wind gusts with any collapsing cores with relatively steeper (7.5-8 C/km) low- level lapse rates and DCAPE values approaching 600-800 J/kg, primarily in southeast MN. However, given skinny instability profiles with MLCAPE values under 1000 J/kg, any updrafts will likely be weak in addition to having a tendency to fall apart quickly due to the lack of 0-6km shear. By the overnight hours on Tuesday, a surface cold front associated with a descending upper-level low pressure center will begin to move into the area increasing precipitation chances dramatically as it approaches the local area. Overall, the grand ensemble (GEFS/EC/Canadian ensemble) has very high probabilities (70-90%) for measurable rainfall across the area as this boundary passes through. However, with instability being fairly meager (under 500 J/kg of MLCAPE in the 01.09z RAP) and precipitable waters being around 1", really not expecting this rainfall to be overly efficient. As a result, probabilities in the grand ensemble (GEFS/EC/Canadian ensemble) for rainfall amounts over 0.25" are quite low (10-30%) before precipitation exits Wednesday afternoon. Wednesday - This Weekend: Unseasonably Cool Temperatures As the aforementioned cold front exits the region, a north to northwesterly flow regime takes over ushering in cold air advection into the area. Consequently, expecting high temperatures to be noticeably cooler starting on Wednesday with median high temperatures in the NBM in the middle to upper 60s, around 10-15 degrees below normal for this time of year. Thursday will likely be the coolest day of the forecast period as the upper-level low positions just to our north with 850mb temperatures in the 01.12z GFS/EC of around 0C to -2C across the local area. As a result, the inter-quartile range for low temperatures on Thursday morning range from the middle 30s to upper 40s across the area. Some frost cannot be ruled out in the coldest spots however this will be dictated by how cloud trends manifest. Daytime high temperatures on Thursday may even challenge daily cold record highs at some locations with the inter-quartile range for high temperatures in the NBM ranging from around 50 degrees to the middle 60s on Thursday. Important to note that the record cold high temperatures at both La Crosse and Rochester is 60 degrees on Thursday and there is certainly some potential these could be challenged. By overnight Thursday and into Friday, a secondary reinforcing shortwave and surface frontal passage will bring additional precipitation chances into the area during this timeframe in addition to keeping northwesterly flow in place and perpetuating this cooler than normal pattern into the weekend. The grand ensemble (GEFS/EC/Canadian ensemble) overall has respectable probabilities (40-70%) for measurable precipitation with this secondary frontal passage into Friday morning. Regardless, continued northwesterly flow will likely keep us cooler than normal into the weekend with forecast confidence beginning to degrade by the end of the weekend and into early next week. Realistically two schools of thought are in play as far as the overall synoptic pattern from Sunday and onward. The first being that upper-level ridging builds into the area allowing our temperatures to moderate from Sunday and onward as reflected in the 01.12z deterministic GFS. The second would favor additional pieces of shortwave energy to move into the region on Sunday and thus reinforce the northwesterly flow pattern, keeping us cooler into early next week. Overall, the grand ensemble (GEFS/EC/Canadian) mean cluster analysis would suggest a slow warming trend into early next week but again this will be dependent on how the synoptic pattern ultimately resolves. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 1251 PM CDT Mon Sep 1 2025 VFR conditions will persist this afternoon into the overnight hours. Potential for valley fog remains overnight into Tuesday morning, but uncertainty in the overall extent remains, primarily if mist/fog will impact KLSE. Conditions continue to favor valley fog, so could see a similar scenario to the past few nights with a brief period of impact. Highest confidence in fog is across southwest Wisconsin. there is low potential (10-20%) for showers and perhaps a storm late Tuesday morning over southeast Minnesota, but confidence is not high enough to include in the KRST TAF at this time. The potential for showers and storms begins to increase at the tail end of the TAF period && .ARX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... WI...None. MN...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Naylor AVIATION...Falkinham