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New Hradec, North Dakota Weather Forecast Discussion

388
FXUS63 KBIS 121440
AFDBIS

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Bismarck ND 940 AM CDT Fri Sep 12 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Several rounds of scattered showers and thunderstorms through the middle of next week.

- Medium probabilities for at least an inch of rain across the western half of the state through this weekend.

- Isolated severe thunderstorms possible late this afternoon through Sunday.

- Temperatures favored to remain near to above average through the middle of next week.

&&

.UPDATE... Issued at 940 AM CDT Fri Sep 12 2025

Surface low is analyzed in south central South Dakota this morning, with a few different areas of convection bubbling across southwest and central North Dakota. SPC mesoanalysis page is advertising still a modest amount of MLCIN across the area, although lightning is beginning to pick up after diminishing earlier this morning. Also broadly have 30 knots of bulk shear overlaid with 1000-1500 J/kg of instability. These storms look to be aligned with some impulses moving through the southwest flow aloft, and although CAMs are not capturing this activity well, there is a broad low but persistent chance of scattered showers and thunderstorms through the day today before increasing potential for isolated severe storms this evening and tonight. Blended in latest guidance to make some small tweaks to POP chances and timing.

UPDATE Issued at 621 AM CDT Fri Sep 12 2025

Around 5 AM CDT, an area of strong convection exploded over Dunn County, with weaker convection initiating to the north and east. SPC mesoanalysis shows this was likely triggered by a combination of upper level divergence and low level frontogenesis that forced parcels above the LFC of the MUCAPE layer. These storms have become more tame since 6 AM CDT, but there is still a threat for small hail, gusty winds, and torrential rainfall. Forecast confidence in the evolution of this convection is very low.

&&

.DISCUSSION... Issued at 444 AM CDT Fri Sep 12 2025

A positively tilted longwave trough axis extends from central Saskatchewan to the Sierra Nevada early this morning, with a lee surface trough from southwest North Dakota to the Nebraska panhandle. Shortwave energy ejecting from the base of the longwave trough into the Northern Plains has been responsible for clusters of showers and thunderstorms since last evening. At 4 AM CDT, convection was much calmer across western and central North Dakota than earlier in the night. A few showers were bubbling in the northern James River Valley along outflow from a departing MCS. A larger area of mostly light rain was focused from around Dickinson to Hettinger, with a few embedded updrafts recently showing signs of intensification. There were also isolated to scattered showers with infrequent lightning lifting northeast through the southern James River Valley. In other news, patchy dense fog has developed across northwest North Dakota. Surface observational trends and webcams suggest that visibility around one quarter mile or less is highly terrain-dependent. Will therefore continue to handle with a Special Weather Statement unless or until conditions change.

Low chances for showers and thunderstorms remain in the forecast this morning and afternoon, mainly across the southern half of the state, but think that drier conditions will be more common today as flow aloft briefly becomes anticyclonic. Surface low pressure broadening over western and central South Dakota will help maintain the humid air mass in place, with widespread dewpoints in the 60s and possibly reaching above 70. Most of western and central North Dakota should be a few degrees cooler today, but still above average with highs around 80 to 85.

From tonight through this weekend, the longwave trough axis will pivot to a negative tilt, with the base of the subsequent shorter wavelength trough moving poleward across the region late Sunday into Monday. This will bring waves of strong synoptic forcing across the western half of the state, resulting in several rounds of showers and scattered thunderstorms. The timing of highest confidence in showers and storms is during the day Saturday when a 700 mb low is forecast to close underneath the left exit region of an upper jet, and deterministic models show a repeat of this setup Sunday evening. NBM probabilities for at least an inch of rain through Monday have risen to 50 to 70 percent across the western half of the state, and the axis of highest probabilities has shifted slightly eastward to between Highways 85 and 83. The potential for high rain amounts is well supported by ensemble climatological tools showing near record values for precipitable water and low level specific humidity, as well as a shift of tails in the EFI QPF output. We do expect that final rainfall amounts will be highly variable given convective influences.

Enough CAPE and shear are forecast to be present to support an isolated risk for severe storms at times from late this afternoon through the weekend. Overall confidence in the convective aspect of the forecast remains low however, with CAMs continuing to show a wide variety of outcomes with placement, timing, and intensity of convection. In addition, most, if not all convection is likely to be elevated. There does appear to a low-probability scenario for a supercell or two south and west of the Missouri River late this afternoon and evening, which temporally corresponds to the highest forecast CAPE (as much as 2000 J/kg per HREF mean) as well as a projected temporary enhancement in deep layer shear (as high as 40 kts). The arrival of stronger forcing later tonight into Saturday should weaken atmospheric instability, but there is still potential for a few embedded storms to become strong to severe at times, as is being advertised by CAMs` UH tracks and highlighted by SPC`s convective outlooks through Sunday. Central North Dakota has a relatively higher risk (albeit still low) for a severe storm over the weekend than the west.

The favored departure time of the negatively-tilted trough has been pushed back to Monday evening/night, shifting the most likely period of drier weather to that time frame. By late Tuesday, another upper low is forecast to meander into the region. This low could stall and bring several more rounds of showers and isolated thunderstorms to the region mid to late next week, but discernible differences in the synoptic pattern begin to emerge in cluster analysis by Thursday.

Cooler daytime temperatures are expected on Saturday and Sunday. Forecast highs each day are generally in the 70s, but any locations where it rains most of the day could be stuck in the 60s. The NBM temperature distribution shows a subtle warmup for Monday and Tuesday before a more distinct cool down to near average temperatures by the end of the week.

&&

.AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 558 AM CDT Fri Sep 12 2025

MVFR cigs/vsbys will be possible at KXWA/KMOT until about mid morning before conditions improve. VFR conditions can be expected to remain the prevailing conditions at all terminals through the daytime hours. Monitoring some convection moving across western ND this morning. This could affect KMOT terminal early this morning and may need to amend the forecast. Will also be monitoring the development of showers and thunderstorms late this afternoon into this evening across western and central ND. Have inserted PROB30 groups into the forecast for all the TAF sites to account for this expected convection. Winds will remain relatively light from the east to northeast through this TAF cycle.

&&

.BIS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

&&

$$

UPDATE...Jones DISCUSSION...Hollan AVIATION...WFO ABR

NWS BIS Office Area Forecast Discussion

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