432  
FXUS63 KARX 131658  
AFDARX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LA CROSSE WI  
1158 AM CDT THU MAR 13 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- A POWERFUL SPRING STORM SYSTEM REMAINS ON TRACK TO IMPACT THE  
REGION FRIDAY AND LINGER INTO THE WEEKEND. GREATEST LOCAL  
IMPACTS WILL BE ON FRIDAY WITH SOUTHERLY WINDS GUSTING AROUND  
30-40 MPH DURING THE DAY AND THEN AN INCREASING RISK FOR A  
LINE OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS DURING THE EVENING HOURS.  
DAMAGING WINDS WILL BE THE MAIN THREAT WITH THESE STORMS, BUT  
CANNOT RULE OUT AN ISOLATED TORNADO.  
 
- UNSEASONABLY WARM FOR THE NEXT TWO DAYS WITH RECORD HIGHS  
LIKELY SHATTERED ON FRIDAY AS TEMPERATURES SURGE WELL INTO THE  
70S. WE COOL STEADILY ON SATURDAY WITH HIGHS 30+ DEGREES  
COLDER FOR SUNDAY.  
 
- ANOTHER POTENT STORM SYSTEM LOOMS FOR THE MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK,  
WITH HEAVY SNOW BEING THE MAIN CONCERN.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 425 AM CDT THU MAR 13 2025  
 
TODAY: THE CALM BEFORE THE STORM  
 
AN ELONGATED SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE CELL OVER THE GREAT LAKES SHUNTS  
EASTWARD AS THE UPSTREAM WEST COAST UPPER TROPOSPHERIC PATTERN  
AMPLIFIES WITH THE LANDFALL OF THE DEEP MERIDIONAL TROUGH THAT WILL  
SERVE TO BRING AN ACTIVE WEATHER PATTERN TO CLOSE THE WEEK. AT LEAST  
FOR TODAY, THE ONLY NOTABLE CHANGES COMPARED TO YESTERDAY WILL BE  
WINDIER AND WARMER AS LEE TROUGHING DEEPENS ALONG THE FRONT RANGE.  
HIGHS TODAY WILL BEAT YESTERDAY'S TEMPERATURES BY 10+ DEGREES WITH  
THE INCREASING WARM AIR ADVECTION. HAVE BUMPED HIGHS A FEW DEGREES  
ABOVE THE NBM DETERMINISTIC FORECAST AS TEMPERATURES HAVE  
OVERACHIEVED IT BY 2-4 DEGREES EACH OF THE LAST 4 DAYS. IT IS  
CONCEIVABLE THAT A FEW LOCATIONS TOUCH 70 DEGREES WITH ABOUT 20% OF  
THE NBM MEMBERS HINTING AT THAT POSSIBILITY SOUTH OF I-94.  
 
FRIDAY: RECORD WARMTH - GUSTY WINDS - SEVERE STORM POTENTIAL  
 
FRIDAY'S POWERFUL SPRING STORM SYSTEM WILL BRING A PLETHORA OF  
IMPACTS AND HAZARDS FOR THE CENTRAL PART OF THE UNITED STATES. FOR  
THE LOCAL AREA, THERE ARE THREE BIG ITEMS WORTH NOTING, RECORD  
WARMTH, GUSTY WINDS, AND THE THREAT FOR SEVERE WEATHER IN THE  
EVENING. FOR DETAILS ON THE FIRE WEATHER RISK, SEE THE FIRE WEATHER  
SECTION OF THE DISCUSSION BELOW.  
 
RECORD WARMTH  
 
THERE IS LITTLE DOUBT THAT WE WILL SEE HIGH TEMPERATURES REACH  
RECORD TERRITORY FOR FRIDAY WITH A VERY TIGHT CLUSTERING IN THE  
GUIDANCE. THIS ASPECT OF THE FORECAST HAS BEEN WELL-RESOLVED OVER  
THE LAST FEW DAYS AND HAVE CONTINUED THE TREND OF NUDGING THE HIGH  
TEMPERATURE FORECAST TO THE BETTER-VERIFYING NBM 50TH PERCENTILE  
WHICH WOULD SET DAILY RECORDS FOR MOST LOCALES (BUT ONLY BY A FEW  
DEGREES, AS HIGHLIGHTED BY THE EFI).  
 
GUSTY WINDS  
 
SSE WINDS INCREASE THROUGH THE DAY WITH FORECAST PROFILES IN  
AGREEMENT THAT WE SHOULD GUST TO 30-40 MPH THIS AFTERNOON. WHILE THE  
STRONGEST WINDS REMAIN DISPLACED TO THE SOUTH OF THE FORECAST AREA,  
THERE IS SOME RISK THAT WE COULD TAP INTO A 40-50 KT 850-MB JET IF  
WE MIX DEEPER THAN CURRENTLY FORECAST. THE OVERNIGHT RUNS OF THE  
RAP/HRRR HAVE BEEN LEANING ON THIS POSSIBILITY AND WILL NEED TO  
ASSESS ANY INCREASES IN WIND SPEED LATER TODAY.  
 
SEVERE WEATHER RISK  
 
AN ARCING LINE OF CONVECTION DEVELOPS OVER CENTRAL IOWA AT PEAK  
HEATING ALONG THE PACIFIC FRONT AND PLOWS NNE AT SPEEDS OF 30 TO 40  
MPH, ARRIVING IN NORTHEAST IOWA AROUND THE 5 TO 6 PM TIMEFRAME,  
CROSSING THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER AROUND 10PM, AND REACHING CENTRAL  
WISCONSIN AFTER MIDNIGHT. THE BIGGEST CHANGE IN THE OVERNIGHT  
GUIDANCE HAS BEEN THE MUCH DEEPER MIXING DEPICTED BY THE HRRR/RAP IN  
THE WARM SECTOR 2 TO 4 HOURS AHEAD OF THE QLCS. THIS RESULTS IN LCLS  
JUMPING TO 1500-2000 M AND VERY PROMINENT INVERTED-V SOUNDINGS UP TO  
700 MB.  
 
WHILE THIS SCENARIO WOULD AMPLIFY THE DOWNBURST THREAT, IT ALSO  
ERODES THE SBCAPE TO THE POINT THAT THE STRENGTH OF THE UPDRAFTS  
(AND ASSOCIATED DOWNDRAFTS AND DAMAGING WINDS) COULD BE CALLED INTO  
QUESTION. HOWEVER, THE STRONG SYNOPTIC DYNAMICS AND 50-70 KT 850-MB  
JET THAT COULD BE TAPPED TO ENHANCE SURFACE WIND GUSTS MAY STILL BE  
SUFFICIENT TO OVERCOME THIS LOSS OF INSTABILITY. THE LOSS OF SBCAPE  
WOULD ONLY FURTHER DECREASE THE WIND AND TORNADO THREAT.  
 
IF WE DO NOT MIX OUT AND TORNADOES ARE STILL IN THE CARDS, THE SSE  
TO NNW ORIENTATION OF THE LINE COMPARED TO THE S-N ORIENTATION OF  
THE 0-3-KM SHEAR VECTOR MEANS THAT ANY BOWING LINE SEGMENT WOULD  
NEED TO UNDERGO SUBSTANTIAL REORIENTATION TO REALIZE A QLCS TORNADO  
POTENTIAL. THE DEEPER SHEAR ORIENTATION LOOKS TO BE SOMEWHAT MORE  
FAVORABLE COMPARED TO YESTERDAY FOR UPDRAFT MAINTENANCE.  
 
SATURDAY - SUNDAY: STEADILY COOLING, RAW, SCATTERED RAIN/SNOW SHOWERS  
 
THE TRUE SURFACE COLD FRONT PLOWS EASTWARD THROUGH THE FORECAST AREA  
SATURDAY MORNING AS THE OCCLUDING SURFACE LOW PIVOTS AND EJECTS TO  
THE NORTHEAST OVERNIGHT INTO SATURDAY MORNING. EXPECT HIGHS ON  
SATURDAY TO BE REACHED IN THE EARLY MORNING HOURS WITH FALLING  
TEMPERATURES THROUGH THE DAY. ALSO LOOK FOR PERIODS OF SHOWERS  
WRAPPING AROUND THE OCCLUDED CYCLONE AND THROUGH THE FORECAST AREA  
ON SATURDAY, GRADUALLY BECOMING MORE SCATTERED INTO THE EVENING.  
EVEN THOUGH THE LOW IS PULLING AWAY BY SATURDAY AFTERNOON, A  
LINGERING 500-MB VORT LOBE/WAVE SHOULD KEEP THE RISK FOR SHOWERS  
THROUGH THE NIGHT INTO SUNDAY MORNING, WITH ENOUGH COLDER AIR  
FILTERING DOWN TO CHANGE THE PRECIPITATION TYPE TO SNOW. AMOUNTS  
LOOK TO BE VERY LIGHT, IF ANYTHING. WINDS ON SATURDAY WILL GUST TO  
25 TO 35 MPH, WHICH WHEN COMBINED WITH THE FALLING TEMPERATURES AND  
RAIN, WILL MAKE FOR A RATHER RAW DAY.  
 
MONDAY - TUESDAY: REBOUNDING TEMPERATURES  
 
THE SUNDAY COOL DOWN WILL BE SHORT-LIVED AS THE UPPER LEVEL TROUGH  
MIGRATES EASTWARD AND WARMER AIR SURGES NORTHWARD WITH AN ADVANCING  
WARM FRONT. HOW FAR NORTH THIS WARM FRONT ADVANCES IS THE BIG  
QUESTION WITH A 10-15 DEGREE SPREAD IN THE INTERQUARTILE RANGE OF  
THE NBM MEMBERS (UPPER 40S TO MID 60S). THE NORTHERN EXTENT OF THIS  
BAROCLINIC ZONE WILL ALSO HELP DRIVE THE TRACK OF OUR MIDWEEK SNOW  
STORM...  
 
MIDWEEK: HEAVY SNOW?  
 
WHILE SEVEN DAYS OUT, THE SIGNAL FOR A HEAVY SNOW OVER THE NORTH-  
CENTRAL CONUS BETWEEN LATE TUESDAY AND EARLY THURSDAY IS SOLIDLY  
PEGGED IN THE LONGER RANGE ENSEMBLES. THERE ARE STILL APPRECIABLE  
DIFFERENCES IN THE LONGWAVE PATTERN WITHIN THE ENSEMBLE CLUSTER  
SPACES, WITH ABOUT A 50/50 SPLIT IN A MORE PROGRESSIVE AND SHALLOW  
WAVE THAT TAKES THE SURFACE LOW FURTHER NORTH AND ONLY GRAZES THE  
FORECAST AREA WITH SNOW WHEREAS THE OTHER HALF DEEPEN THE WAVE AND  
BRING UP A STRONG CYCLONE THAT LAYS OUT A DEFORMATION ZONE THROUGH  
THE REGION.  
 
THE ENSEMBLE MEMBERS THAT DO DEVELOP THIS DEFORMATION ZONE ARE  
GENERATING RESPECTABLE SNOW AMOUNTS WITH 50% OF THE TOTAL EPS  
MEMBERS (WITH A 10:1 SLR) BRINGING 6 INCHES OF SNOW AND 30% OF THE  
MEMBERS DROPPING 12-18 INCHES OF SNOW. THE OPERATIONAL EC SURFACE  
FIELDS ALSO RAISE THE CONCERN THAT STRONG WINDS COULD ACCOMPANY THIS  
SNOW, BUT SUCH DETAILS ARE HARD TO PIN DOWN THIS FAR OUT. THE GEFS  
IS LESS RAMBUNCTIOUS WITH SNOW AMOUNTS HERE GIVEN THAT MORE OF ITS  
MEMBERS FAVOR THE SHALLOWER WAVE THAT BRINGS THE HEAVY SNOW FURTHER  
NORTH INTO NORTHERN MINNESOTA, BUT THE FEW MEMBERS THAT DO HAVE THIS  
MORE AMPLIFIED PATTERN ARE ALSO SPITTING OUT SIMILAR SNOW AMOUNTS.  
SPRING IS CERTAINLY HERE!  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z FRIDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1154 AM CDT THU MAR 13 2025  
 
VFR CONDITIONS EXPECTED ACROSS THE TERMINALS FOR THE NEXT 24 HOURS.  
SOUTHEASTERLY WINDS WILL CONTINUE THROUGH THE AFTERNOON WITH GUSTS  
INCREASING AT THE KRST TERMINAL IN THE NEXT TWO HOURS OR SO. WIND  
SPEEDS SHOULD STAY ELEVATED AT KRST THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS  
AROUND 15 KTS WITH KLSE STAYING BELOW 10 KTS. A SOUTHERLY LLJ  
IS EXPECTED TO DEVELOP OVERNIGHT WITH LLWS BECOMING A PROBLEM AT  
BOTH TERMINALS GENERALLY BETWEEN 04Z AND 14Z TOMORROW. THIS  
WILL TAPER OFF BY MID MORNING WITH SURFACE WIND SPEEDS  
INCREASING AND GUSTS OVER 25 KTS ANTICIPATED AT BOTH TERMINALS  
BY LATE MORNING.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 425 AM CDT THU MAR 13 2025  
 
NEAR CRITICAL FIRE CONDITIONS FOR NORTHEAST IOWA FRIDAY  
AFTERNOON...  
 
WHILE THE RISK FOR STRONG SSE WINDS GUSTING TO 30 TO 40+ MPH IS  
WELL RESOLVED IN THE FORECAST FOR FRIDAY AFTERNOON, THE DEGREE  
TO WHICH WE MIX IN THE AFTERNOON AHEAD OF THE APPROACHING STORMS  
(AND ITS EFFECT ON HUMIDITY VALUES) IS THE BIGGEST WILD CARD IN  
THE FORECAST. THE OVERNIGHT RUNS OF THE RAP AND HRRR HAVE BEEN  
VERY AGGRESSIVE IN MIXING THE BOUNDARY LAYER TO UPWARDS OF 5 TO  
10 KFT, DROPPING DEWPOINTS INTO THE MID-40S. COMBINED WITH  
RECORD WARM TEMPERATURES IN THE MID TO EVEN UPPER 70S, HUMIDITY  
VALUES COULD CRASH TO AROUND 30% OR EVEN LOWER IN THE AFTERNOON.  
THIS IS A LOW CONFIDENCE FORECAST RIGHT NOW AND WILL NEED TO BE  
REASSESSED AS WE GO THROUGH THE DAY.  
 
IN IOWA, THE GFDI IS ALREADY GETTING INTO EXTREME LEVELS FOR  
THE AFTERNOON ON FRIDAY WITH THE HIGHER DEWPOINTS CURRENTLY  
SUPPLIED BY THE NBM. FIRE WEATHER HEADLINES MAY BE NEEDED IF THE  
DEWPOINTS FALL ANY FURTHER THAN FORECAST.  
 
 
   
CLIMATE  
 
ISSUED AT 425 AM CDT THU MAR 13 2025  
 
POSSIBLE RECORD WARMTH (RECORD / FORECAST):  
 
MAXIMUM MINIMUM  
THURSDAY (03/13)  
ROCHESTER, MN 68 (2024) / 64 N/A  
LA CROSSE, WI 71 (2015) / 69 N/A  
 
FRIDAY (03/14)  
ROCHESTER, MN 74 (2012) / 72 49 (2012) / 50  
LA CROSSE, WI 75 (2012) / 77 49 (1990) / 47  
 
 
   
ARX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
WI...NONE.  
MN...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
DISCUSSION...SKOW  
AVIATION...BARENDSE  
FIRE WEATHER...SKOW  
CLIMATE...SKOW  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab WI Page
The Nexlab IA Page
The Nexlab MN Page
Main Text Page