053 FXUS63 KARX 150745 AFDARXArea Forecast Discussion National Weather Service La Crosse WI 245 AM CDT Mon Sep 15 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Heat and humidity linger through midweek, with a transition back to seasonable temperatures towards the end of the week.
- Low (10-20%) risk for an isolated storm west of the Mississippi River today.
- Confidence in widespread showers later this week is decreasing with the main rain axis shifting westward.
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.DISCUSSION... Issued at 245 AM CDT Mon Sep 15 2025
Summertime Warmth through Midweek
A blocking weather pattern lingers across the central CONUS through much of the week, resulting in little change in our summertime airmass over the next few days. Highs should continue to top out in the 80s with dewpoints in the 60s and 70s through Wednesday, with only a gradual cooling trend for Thursday through Saturday as a mid to upper level cutoff low gradually builds into the region from the west. Local modulations in these forecast highs owing to storms are possible--mainly west of the Mississippi River--but confidence in these storms is low (see section below) and therefore it is tough to deviate from the current NBM forecast highs. Temperatures should wander closer to average by the upcoming weekend.
Low Probability Storm Risks for the Week
A multitude of low probably storms chances dot the forecast for the upcoming week. This risk area is mainly west of the Mississippi River with subsidence off the downstream ridge/high pressure cell limiting the eastward progression of these storms.
For this morning, a ribbon of 335-K 700-mb theta-e air is generating sprinkles across central Iowa early this morning. This feature lifts NNE over the next 6-9 hours and could clip southeastern MN before waning by mid-morning.
A passing upper tropospheric wave lifting NNE through the Dakotas and western MN lowers heights just enough that surface- based convection is a possibility this afternoon. HRRR/RAP forecast profiles show 1500 J/kg of MLCAPE and somewhat elongated hodographs that would be supportive of organized convective structures. The missing piece is a forcing mechanism. The upper trough axis will be lifting north of the region in the afternoon and there is little in the way of a surface boundary to latch onto. If anything, there is a signal for weakly confluent flow at the surface that could be enough to overcome the MLCIN. The widely varying (but rather dry) solutions from the 00Z HREF members is telling of the low predictability of this forecast. Have kept broad low (20%) PoPs west of the Mississippi River to account for this remote storm possibility. With ample moisture in play (PWATS around 90% of climatology), any slower moving cell could produce efficient rainfall rates.
Glancing ahead to the middle to latter part of the week, the medium range solutions are depicting a stronger blocking pattern that rebuilds somewhat for the end of the week over the Great Lakes, refusing to give way to a cutoff low over the Northern High Plains. This has resulted in a westward shift in the precipitation probabilities that previously encompasses much of the forecast area, relegating them to mainly west of the Mississippi River. It doesn`t look like the low pushes into the region until Friday or Saturday, which might be when we see more widespread rainfall.
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.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 1236 AM CDT Mon Sep 15 2025
VFR conditions are expected to prevail over the next 24 hours across much of the area with the exception of the usual nighttime fog trouble spots around BCK and along the Wisconsin River Valley. There is some uncertainty surrounding potential for TS along and west of the Mississippi River but latest trends suggest this is increasingly doubtful (10-20% chance of occurrence) so have removed the PROB30 groups from the RST/LSE TAFs. Otherwise, winds out of the east-southeast at around 5-10 knots will continue with a good amount of upper level clouds in the 10-15 kft layer.
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.ARX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... WI...None. MN...None. IA...None.
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DISCUSSION...Skow AVIATION...Ferguson
NWS ARX Office Area Forecast Discussion