Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Des Moines, IA
Issued by NWS Des Moines, IA
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666 FXUS63 KDMX 052306 AFDDMX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Des Moines IA 606 PM CDT Fri Jul 5 2024 ...Updated for the 00z Aviation Discussion... .KEY MESSAGES... - Scattered showers and isolated non-severe thunderstorms into this evening. - Quiet tonight into Saturday morning. Storm chances return late Saturday afternoon into Saturday night. Few stronger storms possible far west. - Additional chances for showers and isolated storms persist into early next week with temperatures in the upper 70s to 80s. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 252 PM CDT Fri Jul 5 2024 An active pattern remains into at least early next week with an elongated upper trough in place across much of the central U.S. This will keep rain showers and/or storms in the forecast off and on over the next several days but on a positive note, will also keep temperatures from getting excessively warm with the heat dome stuck over the southwest into western U.S. Up first is the scattered showers which have been ongoing at times this morning into early afternoon over mainly the north to east driven by an upper low moving through southeast MN/southern WI/northeast IA today before moving off to the Great Lakes Region into tonight. This low is also responsible for the partly cloudy skies over much of the area. Although coverage will remain mostly scattered at best, the diurnally driven showers with a few isolated storms possible will continue through the rest of the afternoon into early evening, dissipating with time into the later evening hours. Although instability values may approach 1000 J/kg late this afternoon, bulk shear values remain weak, generally under 15-20 knots through much of the forecast area with the slightly stronger shear of 20-30 knots across the far south offset from the higher instability values (relatively speaking) further north. Severe storms are not anticipated given this parameter space, though can`t completely rule out some small hail or gusty winds if a stronger storm can develop with ambient winds out of the northwest already breezy to gusty this afternoon with gusts up to around 25-30 mph. Environmental winds will diminish this evening with conditions drying out and clouds gradually clearing leading to a cool night temperature-wise as lows fall into the 50s to low 60s. Can`t completely rule out some patchy fog developing, especially east to northeast. Saturday will start out dry but the next shortwave drops through the northern Plains through the day helping to kick off storms over South Dakota into Nebraska which look to near the Iowa/Nebraska border late afternoon and ultimately reaching the area tomorrow evening. Guidance varies significantly in overall coverage of storms as they reach into central Iowa but most models agree on a general weakening trend at this point. Increasing warm air advection through the afternoon may lead to a few isolated storms prior to the main line as well. Overall the severe threat remains low at this time with low level shear very weak and a limiting factor despite otherwise stronger and more favorable bulk shear values. In addition, a warm layer in the mid-levels limits any steepening lapse rates to the low levels and keeps the skinny CAPE profiles all elevated. Won`t rule out some stronger storms with hail or gusty winds in the far west depending on overall storm intensity as it nears the area, which is captured well by the SPC Day 2 Marginal (Level 1 out of 5) which clips several of our far western counties on Saturday night. Storms do have the potential to bring some locally heavy rain as pwats near 1.5", but overall QPF amounts remain under 1" except for highly localized areas of 1-2+ inches, mainly in the south to southwest which certainly has a bit more capacity for some rain than areas further north. See the hydro discussion below for a bit more information. Any lingering rain ends in the east late Saturday night/early Sunday morning but additional chances for showers or storms exist at times later Sunday into early next week, as noted above, as additional shortwaves move through the otherwise prevailing northwest flow. Temperatures stay in the upper 70s or 80s through much of the week, though warmer temperatures may be on the horizon just beyond the work week with the Climate Prediction Center noting a 60-70% chance for above normal temperatures in the 8-14 day outlook which covers the period of July 13-19. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 605 PM CDT Fri Jul 5 2024 Spotty showers and a few storms will diminish early this evening and clouds will dissipate while winds decrease as well. VFR conditions are forecast at all terminals, but there remains a low chance of patchy fog over north central Iowa towards 12z. Inclusion at MCW was considered, but given low spatial confidence, have held off and will evaluate at 6z issuance. && .HYDROLOGY... Issued at 252 PM CDT Fri Jul 5 2024 River forecast updates from this morning continue to show gradual decreases in stage heights across area rivers. Spotty chances of scattered showers and thunderstorms today may cause local rises in area rivers and streams. This may result in river levels receding slower. Our active upper air pattern will result in continued off and on shower and thunderstorm chances into the weekend and next week. Deterministic model output shows PWATs across southern Iowa Saturday night approaching 1.5 inches, which may result in locally heavy rainfall here if storms develop. PWATs Sunday night into Monday are also in the 1.50 to 1.75 inch range across southern, central, and eastern portions of the CWA. However, ensemble guidance is not too impressive with this activity as significant rises across area rivers aren`t anticipated. && .DMX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...KCM AVIATION...Ansorge HYDROLOGY...Castillo