393  
FXUS63 KFSD 161737  
AFDFSD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD  
1237 PM CDT WED APR 16 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- WARM, DRY, AND BREEZY CONDITIONS TODAY RESULTS IN ELEVATED TO  
NEAR CRITICAL FIRE DANGER THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING -  
ESPECIALLY ALONG AND EAST OF I-29.  
 
- SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES RETURN THURSDAY MORNING INTO  
FRIDAY MORNING. THE HIGHEST CHANCES (50-70 PERCENT) ARE EAST  
OF INTERSTATE 29. SOME STORMS MAY BE STRONG TO SEVERE,  
ESPECIALLY THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING, MAINLY ALONG AND  
SOUTHEAST OF A LINE FROM YANKTON TO WINDOM.  
 
- PERIODIC LOW PRECIPITATION CHANCES AND NEAR NORMAL  
TEMPERATURES RETURN FOR THE WEEKEND INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 335 AM CDT WED APR 16 2025  
 
NOW-TONIGHT: PLEASANT START TO THE MORNING WITH TEMPERATURES IN THE  
30S AND 40S. MOSTLY CLEAR SKIES, ALTHOUGH BEGINNING TO SEE CIRRUS  
DEVELOP AND ADVECT IN FROM THE WEST. SOUTHEASTERLY WINDS ARE  
OCCASIONALLY GUSTING AROUND 20 TO 25 MPH.  
 
FOR THE REST OF TODAY, SOUTH TO SOUTHEAST FLOW CONTINUES TO  
INCREASE. GUSTS AROUND 20-30 MPH (STRONGEST EAST OF I-29) ARE  
EXPECTED WITH PEAK MIXING AND AS THE SPG COMPRESSES. WARM AND DRY  
AIR LEADS TO RH VALUES PLUMMETING TO 20-25% OVER THE AREA; HOWEVER,  
THE LOWEST RH AND HIGHEST WINDS ARE OFFSET. ELEVATED TO NEAR  
CRITICAL FIRE DANGER IS EXPECTED TODAY, ESPECIALLY ALONG AND EAST OF  
I-29 WHERE THE WINDS WILL BE THE STRONGEST. TAKE PRECAUTIONS TO  
PREVENT FIRE START TODAY. FOR NOW, WILL HOLD OFF ON ANY FIRE WEATHER  
HEADLINES AND ALLOW THE DAY SHIFT TO MONITOR TRENDS. HIGHS TODAY  
WILL WARM INTO THE 70S.  
 
CLOUDS INCREASE TONIGHT AS THE FIRST WAVE APPROACHES THE REGION.  
FURTHER WEST, ELONGATED MID AND UPPER LEVEL POSITIVELY TILTED  
TROUGHING DEEPENS INTO THE FOUR CORNERS REGION BRINGING  
SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT. SOUTHERLY SURFACE FLOW AND WAA KEEP  
TEMPERATURES MILD TONIGHT, WITH LOWS IN THE MID 40S TO MID 50S.  
 
THURSDAY: AS THE FIRST VORTICITY MAX/MID LEVEL SHORT WAVE APPROACHES  
AND A WEAK SURFACE LOW SLIDES INTO CENTRAL SD, EXPECT ISOLATED TO  
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS TO DEVELOP. SOUNDINGS DO SHOW A  
CAP IN PLACE, WHICH MAY HINDER DEVELOPMENT. CAPE VALUES AROUND 500-  
1000 J/KG ALONG WITH SUPPORT FROM THE LLJ INCREASING SHEAR, AND  
STEEP MID LEVEL LAPSE RATES OVER 7.5 DEG C/KM COULD LEAD TO QUARTER  
SIZED HAIL - IF STORMS CAN BREAK THE CAP. CONVECTION COULD ALSO BE  
MORE ELEVATED IN NATURE (TOWARD THE 700 MB FRONT) IF WE CAN'T FULLY  
BREAK THE CAP, WHICH WOULD STILL MAINTAIN THE QUARTER SIZED HAIL  
THREAT DURING THE MORNING THROUGH ABOUT NOON.  
 
SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES RETURN DURING THE AFTERNOON AND  
EVENING HOURS THURSDAY, ALTHOUGH UNCERTAINTY IN TIMING AND COVERAGE  
OF DEVELOPMENT REMAINS. THIS IS MAINLY DUE TO SOME TIMING ISSUES IN  
THE FRONTAL BOUNDARIES AND EMBEDDED SHORT WAVES, IN ADDITION TO THE  
ROBUST CAP IN PLACE - EVIDENT ON SOUNDINGS ACROSS THE REGION. CAMS  
ARE STRUGGLING IN RESOLVING THE COVERAGE AND TIMING OF SHOWERS AND  
STORMS AS WELL, LEADING TO LOWER CONFIDENCE. HOWEVER, IF THE CAP CAN  
BREAK, STORMS MAY BECOME STRONG TO SEVERE QUICKLY IN THE WARM  
SECTOR/JUST AHEAD OF THE SURFACE COLD FRONT. GREATEST RISK OF SEVERE  
STORMS LOOKS TO BE ALONG AND SOUTHEAST OF A LINE FROM YANKTON TO  
WINDOM DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING HOURS. MUCAPE VALUES ARE  
ROUGHLY 1000-1500 J/KG, COMBINED WITH 0-6 KM SHEAR VALUES AT OR  
ABOVE 35 KNOTS AND MID LEVEL LAPSE RATES NEAR/ABOVE 7.5 DEG C/KM  
WOULD SUPPORT LARGE HAIL (HALF DOLLAR SIZE). STRONG WIND GUSTS TO  
60 MPH ARE ALSO POSSIBLE WITH DCAPE VALUES UP TO 700 J/KG.  
 
HIGHS ON THURSDAY WILL BE DEPENDENT ON HOW QUICKLY THE COLD FRONT  
MOVES THROUGH, BUT GENERALLY EXPECT HIGHS IN THE 60S WEST OF THE  
JAMES RIVER TO THE 70S EAST. SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS LINGER INTO  
THE OVERNIGHT BEHIND THE SURFACE FRONT, WITH LOWS IN THE 30S.  
 
FRIDAY: SHOWERS AND ISOLATED STORMS MAY LINGER THROUGH THE FIRST  
HALF OF THE DAY ON FRIDAY. COOLER AND BREEZY WITH STRONG NORTHERLY  
WINDS. HIGHS IN THE 40S AND 50S. LOWS IN THE 20S AND 30S.  
 
SATURDAY-WEDNESDAY: MID AND UPPER LEVEL TROUGH CONTINUES TO SLIDE TO  
THE EAST DURING THE FIRST HALF OF THE WEEKEND. BY SUNDAY, ANOTHER  
SURFACE LOW PASSES TO THE SOUTH OF OUR FORECAST AREA, WHICH MAY  
BRING SOME LIGHT RAIN CHANCES TO THE REGION. GUIDANCE VARIES IN THE  
EVOLUTION OF THIS SYSTEM AS WELL AS THE NEXT SHORT WAVES EARLY NEXT  
WEEK, SO MAY SEE PERIODIC LOW RAIN CHANCES DURING THIS TIME. LEFT  
THE NBM AS IS GIVEN LOW CONFIDENCE. TEMPERATURES REMAIN NEAR  
NORMAL.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z THURSDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1237 PM CDT WED APR 16 2025  
 
MOSTLY CLEAR SKIES FOR THE FIRST HALF OF THE PERIOD, WITH CLOUDS  
INCREASING AFTER 17.09Z AS A WAVE APPROACHES FROM THE WEST. WINDS  
WILL BE SOUTHEASTERLY BETWEEN 10-15 KTS, WITH GUSTS UP 20 KTS. THE  
STRONGEST WINDS ALONG AND EAST OF I-29, WHERE WINDS OF 15-20 KTS ARE  
EXPECTED WITH GUSTS UP TO 25 KTS. WINDS BEGIN TO SHIFT AS THE  
AFOREMENTIONED WAVE APPROACHES, GRADUALLY BECOMING NORTHERLY FROM  
WEST TO EAST THROUGH THE MORNING AND AFTERNOON. BEHIND THE WAVE  
WINDS WILL INCREASE AFTER THE END OF THE PERIOD, TO 25-30 KTS GUSTS.  
A BRIEF PERIOD OF LLWS IS POSSIBLE AT KSUX THURSDAY EARLY MORNING,  
HOWEVER CONFIDENCE IS TOO LOW TO INCLUDE IN THE TAF CYCLE.  
 
CEILINGS WILL DECREASE WITH THE INCREASING CLOUDS, BUT LOOK TO  
REMAIN IN THE VFR TO LOW VFR CATEGORY. AREAS EAST OF THE SOUTH  
DAKOTA/MINNESOTA/IOWA BORDER COULD SEE CEILINGS DOWN TO MVFR FOR A  
BRIEF PERIOD THURSDAY MORNING. ISOLATED TO SCATTERED SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS ARE POSSIBLE THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH ABOUT NOON. A  
SECOND ROUND OF POSSIBLY STRONGER SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE  
EXPECTED FOR THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING, THOUGH THERE REMAINS  
SOME UNCERTAINTY DUE TO FRONTAL PASSAGE TIMING.  
 
 
   
FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
SD...NONE.  
MN...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
DISCUSSION...SG  
AVIATION...AJP  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab SD Page
The Nexlab IA Page
The Nexlab MN Page
The Nexlab NE Page
Main Text Page