


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Rapid City, SD
Issued by NWS Rapid City, SD
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
720 FXUS63 KUNR 290843 AFDUNR Area Forecast Discussion For Western SD and Northeastern WY National Weather Service Rapid City SD 243 AM MDT Sun Jun 29 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated to scattered strong to severe storms will again be possible today, mainly across southwestern South Dakota and northeastern Wyoming. - Dry and seasonable conditions expected on Monday. - Hot with chances for isolated storms Tuesday through at least Thursday. && .DISCUSSION...(Today Through Saturday) Issued at 243 AM MDT Sun Jun 29 2025 Widespread thunderstorms continue over the region at this hour. Severe potential has waned, but a cluster of storms near the northern Black Hills/Bearlodge Mountains has supported near-severe hail over the past hour, whereas a weakening storm between the Cheyenne and White Rivers has support wind gusts around 50 mph. Thunderstorms should persist thru much of the night, gradually shifting southward with a band of deep moist convergence in association with a midlevel frontal passage. Zooming out, water vapor imagery shows the upper trof axis remains to our west tonight, with multiple embedded vort maxima/disturbances stretching from southern CN into MT. One shortwave trof digs into the north central CONUS through the day, becoming increasingly amplified as the trof axis crosses the region late tonight into tonight. This approaching wave could support convective initiation over and near the Black Hills, where PWATs remain at 125-150% of normal. 00z HREF mean SBCAPE values remain in the 500-1000 J/kg (or slightly higher) range, coupled with deep-layer shear vector magnitudes of 35 to 40 kt, which could support some strong to severe updrafts. Relatively straight hodographs and skinny CAPE profiles suggest marginally severe splitting supercells may be the primary mode, at least initially, with some upscale growth potential later in the day. Strong Q-vector divergence and associated subsidence overspreads the region on Monday behind the aforementioned trof. Accordingly, a surface high/low-level ridge shifts over the area as low-level thermal ridge begins to nose into the region. Taken together, a warm, sunny day is in store. 00z ensembles show a high likelihood of temperatures falling within 5 degrees of climo (70s and 80s). Tuesday and beyond, deep ridging still appears poised to set up from the southern Plains/Four Corners northwestward through the northern Rockies, with the northern Plains on its eastern periphery. An associated low-level thermal ridge extends east into the central/northern High Plains, with above normal temperatures becoming increasing likely. Increasing CAPE and deep-layer shear will also promote a return of at least isolated storm chances, some of which could end up being strong or severe. The ridge axis shifts overhead on Thursday and may give way to either zonal or southwest flow aloft by Friday, but diverging model solutions lead to decreased confidence late in the period. && .AVIATION...(For the 06Z TAFS Through 06Z Sunday Night) Issued At 1119 PM MDT Sat Jun 28 2025 ISO/SCT TSRA and associated localized MVFR/IFR conditions will continue to move from west to east across the area thru the night, but impacts are not expected at TAF sites. Areas of MVFR/IFR in low stratus and SHRA may develop around or after 09z, mainly along northern/northeastern slopes of the Black Hills. Additional rounds of SHRA/TSRA are anticipated thru the remainder of the period. && .UNR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... SD...None. WY...None. && $$ DISCUSSION/KEY MESSAGES...Sherburn AVIATION...Sherburn