Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Grand Forks, ND

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547 FXUS63 KFGF 021730 AFDFGF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Grand Forks ND 1230 PM CDT Thu May 2 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Rain chances continue with multiple rounds of rain through next week. && UPDATE Issued at 1025 AM CDT Thu May 2 2024 Widespread rain is expected to continue through this evening. Various reports have about 0.3 to 0.5 inches of rain over the Devils Lake Basin and general between 0.1 and 0.2 inches for the Red River Valley. Overall forecast seems to remain on track. UPDATE Issued at 635 AM CDT Thu May 2 2024 Rain has begun to widely overspread eastern North Dakota this morning and parts of northwest Minnesota. Totals thus far in the Devils Lake area are already over 0.10" per NDAWN gauges so QPF seems well on track. No large changes in the forecast just continuing to use Hi-res guidance to follow and match the current rain as best as possible. Overall thoughts remain the same regarding afternoon convective potential with it remaining a low threat for some small hail and the occasional funnel pending afternoon heating if clouds part. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 249 AM CDT Thu May 2 2024 The deep troughing over the western CONUS will continue to slide northeast into south central Canada this weekend as eastern ridging slowly fades and flow becomes more zonal this weekend. Stronger waves will continue to rotate around the parent trough to the north with a brief break in the rain for the weekend as ridging moves in. The first round of rain is just starting to move in from the southwest as a surface low in the central plains interacts with the upper low to the north northwest bringing broad warm air advection into the northern plains with a developing surface low eventually arriving tomorrow afternoon from MT/WY. Expecting the heaviest accumluations to fall across eastern ND and far northwest MN. Ensemble guidance is in good agreement with the 25/75 showing 0.50- 1.00" for the area and 0.25-0.50" for the rest of the area. Steepening lapse rates under the approaching low may result in some cape up to 500 J/kg allowing for embedded convection tomorrow locally enhancing totals across parts of eastern ND. With this convective potential also wouldn`t rule out a few funnels as a sfc boundary sweeps through an airmass with good low level stretching potential aligned with strong surface vorticity gradients but the threat for tornados is low due to cloud cover limiting the potential for diurnal heating and resulting SBCAPE not exceeding a few 100 j/kg. Main area of concern for any of this activity would be in southeast ND and the southern Red River Valley but the threat remains conditional upon afternoon heating occuring. Ridging will follow the late week rain as cold air advection ahead of the ridge begins to shut off the rain machine by Friday morning behind the cold front. A seasonally nice weekend, which feels deserved after this long stretch of dreary weather, with highs in the 60s and 70s by Sunday. Widespread rain chances return as southwest flow brings another slow moving upper low from the four corners region early next week. Between clusters there is agreement on at least an 80% chance for > 0.25" of rain in a 24 hour period sometime on Monday/Tuesday though timing and location of this rainfall varies and thus lots of uncertainty. Upper flow looks to remain weak through the end of next week potentially giving more prolonged rain chances and near average temperatures. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z FRIDAY/...
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Issued at 1230 PM CDT Thu May 2 2024 MVFR conditions prevail across much of the area this afternoon, with periods of IFR ceilings possible during light to moderate rain. Rain continues to lift to the north at midday, with this trend expected to continue well into the afternoon and early evening before eventually tapering off late this evening. Low ceilings are most likely to occur along with rain activity, with current and upstream obs showing consistent 800 to 1200 foot ceilings. Outside of heavier rain, Ceilings are generally in the range of 2000 to 4000 feet. Winds are expected to remain out of the southeast this afternoon, then shift to the southwest and eventually west during the overnight hours.
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&& .FGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ND...None. MN...None. && $$ UPDATE...MM DISCUSSION...TT AVIATION...Lynch