Your favorites:

Dumont, Iowa Weather Forecast Discussion

061
FXUS63 KDMX 210900
AFDDMX

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Des Moines IA 400 AM CDT Sun Sep 21 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Dense Fog Advisory until 9am for parts of southern and central Iowa.

- Marginal Risk for severe weather in northern Iowa. Large hail the main threat. Storms will arrive close to sunset.

- Marginal Risk for severe weather for much of Iowa on Monday. Both damaging winds and large hail are in play.

&&

.UPDATE... Issued at 358 AM CDT Sun Sep 21 2025

A Dense Fog Advisory is in effect until 9am this morning as fog has spread across the cleared areas, mainly in southwest Iowa. Fog may still be found on the fringes of the exiting cloud deck on the northern extent of the advisory.

Water vapor imagery included a few features to note for the next 40 hours: (1) An upper closed low located in North Dakota (2) An extension of the trough in the form of a PV anomaly in western Nebraska and (3) an extension of the 850mb trough reflection in the OK/TX Panhandle region. (2) and (3) will steer the low-level flow and theta-e advection (and resultant instability axis while (1) is the main source of synoptic support for storms in the north.

To start with the more straightforward kinematic setup: The low center will pull an upper jet around it, increasing deep-layer shear in the ballpark of 25-35kt in northern Iowa. At the same time, the front extending to (2) will act as a surface catalyst. Most of the shear will be focused above 1km with straight hodographs pointed orthogonal to the front. There has been a northern trend in the placement of the front and a lag with when CI occurs on the tail end of it. Therefore, the time of arrival in northern Iowa is after 7pm. Hail is the main concern with elevated storms, but gusty winds can`t be ruled out early in the event. There is a Marginal Risk for hail across northern Iowa.

The thermodynamic setup is the more challenging part of the forecast, and it`s thanks to (3) having first dibs at the LLJ and moisture. As mentioned before, some moisture is leaking this far north, evidenced by the clouds collecting on the front in western Nebraska. We`ll largely lose the LLJ for the day, and by the time it tries to push into southern Iowa tonight, it will quickly veer into Illinois, spawning an MCS in northern Missouri in the process. This is why PoPs were cut back in southern Iowa today, some of it being maintained to account for precipitation loading from the isentropic upglide.

The front will sag into the state for Monday with (2) pulling the LLJ back west as well. Marginally favorable deep-layer shear (~25kts) points orthogonal to the front again Monday afternoon. Initiation in the daytime puts damaging winds back into the mix of severe weather threats as DCAPE exceeds 1000 J/kg and theta e differences are around -20K, a sign of strong cold pools. There is now a Marginal Risk for wind and hail on Monday.

&&

.DISCUSSION... Issued at 125 PM CDT Sat Sep 20 2025

An upper level trough over southern Minnesota and northeastern Iowa this afternoon will gradually shift northeastward away from the area tonight. A shortwave impulse rounding the base of the trough is currently generating showers in our southern and southeastern counties, which will linger into the afternoon before slowly ending as the forcing moves off. Meanwhile, modest diurnal heating will result in weak instability (200-400 J/kg of CAPE) later this afternoon and evening, and weak lift associated with the departing upper trough should be sufficient to generate a few additional showers and thunderstorms roughly across the northeastern half of the forecast area. Will include low rain chances (20-30%) in that area into the evening before ending them tonight as the trough moves away and the atmosphere stabilizes. A lack of instability and weak shear fields preclude a severe weather threat today.

Overnight tonight we will finally have a brief respite from rain, while a weak surface high pressure ridge builds across Iowa. This will bring nearly calm winds, with a saturated near-surface layer and dewpoints in the upper 50s to lower 60s. That is a recipe for fog formation, but the limiting factor will be prevailing cloud cover. Even beneath the clouds some fog formation is likely to occur, at least across portions of the area, with visibility falling to perhaps 1-3 miles. However, if there are areas where skies are able to mostly clear, then dense fog formation may be possible with visibility falling to well below a mile. Most high-resolutions depict areas of such dense fog forming in Iowa, however, the location of any such features is unpredictable at this range. For now will include patchy fog, but not dense fog, in the official forecast and will monitor near-term satellite and observational trends tonight.

On Sunday another lobe of upper level vorticity will swing around on the backside of the departing trough, moving across Minnesota and exerting some influence in northern Iowa late in the day. This should be sufficient to generate some thunderstorms, mainly around Sunday evening, and deep-layer shear profiles are somewhat stronger with around 25-30 KT of 0-6 KM Bulk Shear predicted by most models. However, the degree of clearing and insolation remains unclear and there is a high degree of variability in the magnitude of resulting destabilization. Most solutions depict CAPEs nearing 1000 J/KG in our northern and northwestern counties, however the bulk of the dynamic support associated with the vorticity lobe should remain just north of our area. Even so, have included ~50% POPs in our north and northwest late Sunday into Sunday night, and SPC has updated to include a Marginal Risk of severe weather in that area which is prudent. Hail and gusty winds would be the primary threats with any severe storms that due occur.

On Monday a broad surface low pressure trough will develop down the High Plains, with a northern lobe over Nebraska and a southern lobe near the Oklahoma panhandle. Modest zonal steering flow over Iowa coupled with light south southwest low-level flow will promote warn air advection, pushing temperatures into the lower 80s in parts of our service area. A weak surface boundary will also morph into an effective warm front during the day, stretching eastward from the Nebraska trough/low somewhere near or over northern Iowa in the afternoon and evening. Strong destabilization will occur during the day due to low-level warming and persistent cooler temperatures aloft, resulting in CAPE values of approximately 2000-3000 J/kg by late afternoon, likely pooling up against the boundary in the north. While deep-layer shear late Monday will be weaker than on Sunday, more in the 15-20 KT range in the 0-6 KM layer, the degree of instability in proximity to a surface boundary certainly supports some level of threat in terms of severe weather. Any such potential will be sensitive to chances in the instability forecast due to temperature and cloud cover fluctuations, so will revisit tonight and Sunday to determine any trends in the threat level.

From Monday night into Tuesday the northern (Nebraska/Iowa) portion of the High Plains trough will weaken as the southern (Oklahoma) portion deepens and becomes the dominant surface cyclone. This will occur in response to a 500 MB low sinking over Colorado during this time, which will subsequently broaden over Missouri and Iowa on Wednesday and Thursday before moving into the southeastern U.S. at the end of next week. Within this broad scenario we will see a continuation of rain chances in Iowa from Tuesday onward, however, they will gradually become more concentrated over southern portions of the state and depending on how far south the low progresses, it is possible much of Iowa could become dry during this time with Missouri seeing the bulk of any prolonged rainfall. It is also likely that any severe weather threat will remain low in Iowa in the latter half of next week, on the northern periphery of the cyclone. These details will be better determined in the coming days.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z MONDAY/... Issued at 1051 PM CDT Sat Sep 20 2025

Mostly VFR conditions prevail this morning, but will see this quickly change through the next 6 hours as low clouds and fog develop over the area. It seems likely that fog will develop in some capacity, some of which could have visibilities down to a mile or less, becoming dense at times. Likewise, ceilings down to 500 ft or less are possible. As of right now, this looks most likely near KDSM, KOTM and potentially KALO, while KFOD and KMCW look to potentially remain on the northern fringes of the fog. Cloud cover may still spoil how dense the fog gets, but have gone a bit more bullish with the fog and ceilings in 06z TAFs. Fog should start to dissipate after sunrise, with ceilings lifting back into VFR by mid-day.

Shower and thunderstorm chances remain late in the period, but confidence is pretty low in location of impacts. Therefore, have left out of TAFs at this time.

&&

.DMX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Dense Fog Advisory until 9 AM CDT this morning for IAZ046>048- 057>060-070>075-081>086-092>097.

&&

$$

UPDATE...Jimenez DISCUSSION...Lee AVIATION...Dodson

NWS DMX Office Area Forecast Discussion

WeatherForYou.com, LLC is not responsible for any damages or problems caused by this service. Current weather conditions are obtained from the closest government operated station, a personal station contributing to the PWSweather.com network or from the Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System (MADIS). Some weather information is powered by XWeather. WeatherForYou.com, NOAA, AerisWeather and their data providers disclaim liability of any kind whatsoever, including, without limitation, liability for quality, performance, merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose arising out of the use or inability to use the data. Like all things, this site belongs to Jesus Christ ... He just trusts us to maintain it. If you have any questions or comments please use the suggestion box.

Copyright © 1999 - 2025, WeatherForYou.com LLC. All rights reserved.