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Forecast Discussion for Aberdeen, SD
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137 FXUS63 KABR 301934 AFDABR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Aberdeen SD 234 PM CDT Sat May 30 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - The Northern Plains will see an active pattern, and chances for showers and thunderstorms are in place through the rest of the weekend and into the start of next week. - Probability of rain amounts of a quarter of an inch or more through Sunday evening is 60 to 90% west of the James River, highest along and west of the Missouri River. - A Marginal Risk (level 1 of 5) for severe weather is in effect along and west of a line from McIntosh to Miller late late this evening through tonight. Damaging wind gusts of 60-70 mph and hail up to one inch in diameter are the main threats. Brief heavy downpours are also possible. - There is a Marginal Risk (Level 1 of 5) for all of central and portions of northeastern SD Sunday afternoon and evening. Main threats include wind gusts of 60 mph and hail up to an inch in diameter. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 233 PM CDT Sat May 30 2026 Main concern will be the threat of severe weather over central SD late tonight and again Sunday afternoon/evening for north central, central, and portions of northeastern SD. Water Vapor imagery indicates a small mid-level circulation within an overall negative shortwave right over the CWA (which lies northeast of the closed low). This setup along with ongoing southeasterly flow/increased low moisture and daytime heating, scattered showers and a few thunderstorms will continue to form and track north/northwestward here and there for the rest of the afternoon into the evening. CAMs show this well, however, exact coverage and location of this convection do differ from each other. NBM does a good job blending these outcomes. CAPE values during this time will increase between 1000-2000 j/kg mainly over central SD with the highest over south central SD and mid level lapse rates of 6-7C/km. However, shear will be lacking at this time keeping the threat for any bowing/QLCS setup low. The majority of the storms through early evening look to stay north and east of this instability so severe weather is not anticipated at this time, however, if we do get some discrete cells forming earlier over south central SD then some could produce quarter size hail/wind gusts of 60mph. Our attention then turns to late this evening through the overnight. The cutoff low will continue to track northward and over WY by 00Z (and its 850mb low over MT) with a stronger embedded negative tilted shortwave to the southeast of the center of the low over CO/NE/KS. At the surface, an elongated area of low pressure with several embedded circulations reside along the leeside of the Rockies. One circulation will be over WY/SD and its occluded front extending southward with a stronger low over CO/KS/NE border. This energy aloft and along and east of the surface boundary will be the focus of storms firing up over eastern WY and western SD/NE into KS late this afternoon and evening once the cap breaks in the form of discrete cells/clusters per CAMs. CAMs then show this convection coming together and transitioning into more of a line or broken line of storms as they grow upscale and tracking northeast (northern portion of line looks to track north) over central SD between ~03- 06Z. Once east of the Missouri River, the convection looks to really fall apart and weaken due to lack of instability. Speaking of instability, CAPE values will still run between 1000- 2000 j/kg over central SD with the highest clipping Jones County as most of the this higher CAPE will lie west and south of the CWA. Values really diminish the furthest east you go in SD. Once the line of storms go through, this kills off the higher CAPE with values below 1000 j/kg. No real bulk shear ahead of the potential convection, however, it does increase behind it to 30kts over portions of central SD for a few hours, within the wake of the storms. HREF still highlights the potential for a few discrete organized cells/clusters along and west of the Mo RIver, per UH>75m2s2, either ahead of within the developing line before 06Z, but falling apart as the convection tracks east as mentioned. The SPC has pushed any severe just ever so slightly southeast. There is still a Marginal risk for severe storms (1/5) along and west of a line from McIntosh to Miller with a slight risk (2/5) now only clipping far southwestern Jones County. Main threat will be wind gusts of 60 to potentially 70 mph if the system becomes organized as DCAPE will be over 1000 j/kg over central SD. Otherwise, quarter size hail and brief heavy downpours will be the other threats. For Sunday, this negative tilted wave will be over SD and upper low still over WY/MT in the morning. This surface low will still be over northwestern SD and occluded front/trough stretching through southern SD in the morning. This low will track southward and along the SD/NE border by 00Z and to the north of this low, a surface trough sets up through central SD and northeastward to the northern circulation now over southern Saskatchewan. Similar severe parameters expected Sunday afternoon and evening except CAPE of 1-2K will be east of the Mo River and 700-500mb lapse rates of 6-7C/km. So upper level low`s energy and surface trough will bring the potential once again for ongoing scattered showers and thunderstorms that could become severe in the afternoon and evening per daytime heating. The SPC has a Marginal risk (level 1/5) over much of the CWA with the exception of far northeastern SD/western MN. Main threats include quarter size hail and winds up to 60 mph. Probability of rain amounts of a quarter of an inch or more through Sunday evening is 60 to 90% west of the James River, highest along and west of the Mo River. Prob of a half inch or more is 40-70% over central SD. Otherwise this cutoff low over MT/Canada will continue through early next week before tracking into Canada and becoming an open wave by the middle of next week or so with a ridge off to our east. This setup will bring continuing chances of scattered showers and thunderstorms. CSU/NSSL machine learning does highlight the potential of severe weather Tuesday-Thursday over the Northern Plains, however, confidence on exact setup/details and location is low at this time. Temps will continue in the 70s/80s through the weekend and much of next week which is about average for this time of year. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SUNDAY/... Issued at 1215 PM CDT Sat May 30 2026 Terminals KABR,KATY,KPIR,KMBG Scattered rain showers (and an occasional thunderstorm) will continue here and there across the region with the threat of thunderstorms over KPIR and possibly KMBG as a broken line or clusters of storms will track northeastward out of WY/NE and over central SD between ~03-06Z Sunday. Hail up to the size of quarters and wind gusts of 60 to potentially 70 mph are possible with any stronger storms over this location during this time. Any brief heavy downpours will result in temporary cig reductions as well. Storms are expected to weaken in strength east of the Missouri River through early Sunday morning. Mainly VFR/MVFR cigs are forecast through the TAF period with lower cloud deck moving in late Sunday morning (~14-16Z) resulting in a drop to IFR cigs possible. Winds will remain breezy out of the south and southeast with gusts to 25-30kts. && .ABR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... SD...None. MN...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...MMM AVIATION...MMM |
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