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Forecast Discussion for Aberdeen, SD
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205 FXUS63 KABR 111110 AFDABR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Aberdeen SD 510 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Downslope wind gusts in the Sisseton Hills could reach 35 miles per hour or greater this afternoon, potentially making travel more dangerous for high profile vehicles. - 20% chance of mainly light rain Tuesday, then a 40-60% chance of mainly light snow Thursday night and Friday. Winds out of the northwest will gust over 40 mph with both events, but with the Thursday through Friday event, the probability of wind gusts in excess of 55 mph is 45-80 percent right now throughout and west of the James River valley. - Above normal temperatures today through Tuesday expected, with 30s and 40s, and perhaps even some 50s for some locations across central and south central South Dakota. Wednesday through Saturday, high temperatures will be colder, in the 20s and 30s, with maybe some low 40s possible west river. && .UPDATE... Issued at 509 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 Aviation discussion below has been updated in accordance with the 12Z TAF issuance. && .SHORT TERM /TODAY THROUGH MONDAY AFTERNOON/... Issued at 332 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 An upper-level trough over the western CONUS will continue to push eastward today, allowing for a warmer air mass to occupy the region. Over roughly the next 24 hours, a 15 degree increase in 850mb temperatures to the positive single digits Celsius is expected. As a result of this increase, the highs will be 15-20 degrees above normal for mid-January across the forecast area, with a bit of a gradient from northeast to southwest. This warm airmass is expected to persist through the remainder of the short term period, continuing the trend of dry conditions and above normal temperatures through Monday. The other forecast item of note will be the potential for some strong downslope winds this afternoon on the eastern side of the Prairie Coteau. A low pressure center passing to the north helps veer winds just enough during the afternoon to the west-southwest such that winds will be near perpendicular to the slope of the terrain. Therefore, localized gusts up to around 35 miles per hour will be possible this afternoon. These gusts are expected to diminish overnight tonight with the loss of daytime heating as well as winds veering further out of the west, thereby becoming less perpendicular to the slope as well. Gusts may pick up again Monday afternoon over central South Dakota, but are generally expected to remain under 30 miles per hour. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY EVENING THROUGH SATURDAY/... Issued at 332 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 From Monday night through Saturday, the ensembles clusters analysis and deterministic GSM`s all continue to point to a positive PNA flow pattern aloft (northwest flow aloft over the CWA; sometimes more north or more west, but overall call it northwest flow). Still watching a couple of the stronger shortwaves progged by models to move southeastward through the region, anchored on Tuesday and Thursday night/Friday. The qpf clusters analysis does not show anything greater than 0.10in for the Tuesday system, but does suggest at least a tenth of an inch could be in/near the northeastern forecast zones later in the week. Gridded ensemble qpf guidance does focus ~0.10in of qpf on/along the western slopes of the Prairie Coteau there in the Thursday afternoon through Friday afternoon timeframe. PoPs with the Tuesday event have diminished to generally 20 percent or less, but fully suspect to see some WAA-forced light rain glancing the eastern/northeastern zones early Tuesday morning, and then flurries/scattered snow showers, post-cold-fropa Tuesday afternoon/evening. Ensemble-based PoPs have increased, though, with the late week system to likelys (40-60+ percent), with the highest PoP values showing up, right now, Thursday night. A WAA pattern, ongoing, Monday night into Tuesday should prove to have temperatures markedly above normal (in the 30s to low 40s potentially). Prior to 00Z Wednesday, a back-door cold front is progged to push south/southwest into the CWA, signaling the beginning of a CAA sequence that does not finish running its course until ~18Z Wednesday. Not overly confident that the potential record high low temperatures Tuesday morning will stand, given the amount of cold air backing into the CWA late in the day Tuesday into the first half of Tuesday night. Then, low level WAA takes a turn again, and there is a period from Wednesday night through the end of the day Thursday when warmer temperatures (from near the freezing mark to the low 40s) will return to the region. The warm-cold push-pull continues Thursday night through Friday night when the next slug of arctic cold air bounds its way down across the northern plains out of Canada. Considering how active the low level thermal advection pattern is expected to be, it`s not much of a surprise that there will probably be a couple rounds of fairly strong winds happening. Still appears as though the first potential burst of strong winds is lining up over the CWA Tuesday late in the afternoon through late Tuesday night when the strongest low level CAA/pressure rises are occurring over the region. The probability of 45+mph wind gusts Tuesday night is 40-80 percent (with some pockets of greater than 80 percent showing up over the wind-favored areas of the CWA). Probabilities of 45+mph wind gusts are even higher for Thursday afternoon through Friday night (60-95+ percent over much of the CWA), although not seeing strong low level CAA happening until after 00Z Friday, so may be tougher to get that "warm sector" strong wind off the surface to translate all the way down to the ground. But, once the cold air comes surging down into the CWA later Thursday night into Friday, suspect the winds will once again acquire headline criteria strength. It`s during this Thursday night into Friday timeframe that there could be the greatest juxtapositioning of strong winds/gusts and falling snow occurring simultaneously. Will continue to watch this into the shorter range of the forecast in coming days for trends. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY/... Issued at 509 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 Terminals KABR,KATY,KPIR,KMBG VFR conditions are expected to prevail through the entire TAF period today through tonight. The main aviation concern will be wind gusts this afternoon, reaching upwards of 30 knots in north central South Dakota and on the eastern side of the Sisseton Hills. Winds at the surface are expected to taper off this evening, but winds aloft will persist, creating some low-level wind shear over northeastern South Dakota (at KABR and KATY specifically) for a couple of hours. && .ABR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... SD...None. MN...None. && $$ UPDATE...BC SHORT TERM...BC LONG TERM...10 AVIATION...BC |
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