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Forecast Discussion for Aberdeen, SD
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712 FXUS63 KABR 222324 AAA AFDABR Area Forecast Discussion...UPDATED National Weather Service Aberdeen SD 624 PM CDT Sun Mar 22 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - After a cool start to Monday with temperatures in the 20s, warmer readings are expected to return with highs in the 50s to low 60s. - Strong southerly winds gusting to 30-35 mph combined with afternoon humidity of 25-35 percent will create very high grassland fire danger Monday afternoon across central SD. Fires that start may spread quickly. - A couple of weak mid level waves passing to the north around the middle portion of the week may provide northern portions of the forecast area with a few showers with very little in the way of measurable moisture expected. - A temperature roller coaster through the week will lead to readings close to normal on the cooler days to above normal on the warmer days. The coolest period is expected to occur Thursday into Friday. && .UPDATE... Issued at 622 PM CDT Sun Mar 22 2026 The forecast remains on track this evening. No major changes are planned. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 250 PM CDT Sun Mar 22 2026 Overcast skies have been tough to break up in some spots of the forecast area today. We`ve had a little better luck in some areas by midday and early afternoon where sunny breaks have been observed, especially across parts of central SD. Temperatures are running a good 30-40 degrees colder early this afternoon from where they were 24 hours ago. Sfc high pressure building into the area tonight will continue to try and break up more of the cloud cover leading a relatively chilly overnight, but still near normal with readings in the 20s. The sfc ridge will begin shifting east of the CWA early Monday morning turning winds back around to a southerly direction and increasing in speed by midday as the pressure gradient tightens. Probabilities of seeing wind gusts in excess of 30 mph Monday afternoon range between 40-80 percent across most of the forecast area. Warm air advection will pull in a more mild air mass into the area with temperature readings in the 50s to near 60 degrees expected. This will drive min RH values into a 25-35 percent range across parts of central/south central SD leading to very high grassland fire danger. One fly in the ointment perhaps to fire weather/temp expectations will be an increase in mid level moisture in the form of cloud cover which could impact daytime heating. Some of this moisture could materialize into the form of some high based shower activity for parts of central/northeast SD and west central MN Monday afternoon into Monday evening as some weak PVA rotates through the region. Guidance is not bullish on much if any QPF with probabilities for a seeing a hundredth of an inch or greater at 10- 20 percent. A cold front sinking south Monday night into Tuesday is progged to stall out somewhere across the forecast area. This could provide a fair amount of cloud cover to the area, but with dry conditions prevailing. Where that front sets up on Tuesday will have a play on temperature, winds and fire weather conditions. If it sinks far enough south into the CWA, locales north of the boundary will experience a somewhat cooler, cloudier day while locales to the south could pick up more of a gustier southerly wind, warmer temps and elevated fire danger. At this point, figuring our southern zones will stay on the southern side of this front increasing the chances for warmer temps and elevated grassland fire danger. The front will sink south of the CWA Tuesday night into early Wednesday. Some weak mid level energy is progged to cross ND late Tue/early Wed that should keep most precip chances north of the forecast area, but close enough to the ND/SD border to continue to monitor trends. That frontal boundary will lift back to the north and northeast on Wednesday. This could lead to a bit of a tricky temperature forecast where our western zones see temps in the mid 60s to mid 70s while our eastern zones stay in the upper 50s to low 60s. Deterministic/ensemble solutions strongly agree that the forecast area will experience the passage of another strong cold front that will lead to strong northerly winds. In conjunction with this fropa will be more mid level energy working through ND that could provide for some light precip late Wed/early Thu. Again, QPF looks limited with probabilities of seeing a hundredth of an inch or greater range from 20-40 percent across the northern half of the CWA. Windy conditions look more definite with probabilities of seeing wind gusts reach 40 mph or greater at 60-80 percent across the entire CWA. Temperatures will fall back closer to normal for highs Thursday and Friday with readings in the 40s to low 50s. Guidance then is indicating warmer thermal progs to set back up across the region late in the period to kick off next weekend. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 622 PM CDT Sun Mar 22 2026 Terminals KABR,KATY,KPIR,KMBG VFR conditions are expected through Monday. Winds shift to the south-southeast on Monday with gusts to 25 kts. && .ABR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... SD...None. MN...None. && $$ UPDATE...20 DISCUSSION...Vipond AVIATION...20 |
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