626  
FXUS63 KFSD 141718  
AFDFSD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD  
1218 PM CDT SUN SEP 14 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- ISOLATED STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS ARE POSSIBLE THIS AFTERNOON  
AND EVENING, WITH DAMAGING WINDS UP TO 60 MPH AND MARGINALLY  
SEVERE HAIL THE MAIN THREATS.  
 
- TEMPERATURES REMAIN WELL ABOVE NORMAL INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
- A COLD FRONT BRINGS ANOTHER CHANCE OF RAIN AND STORMS LATE  
TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY, AND THEN USHERS IN COOLER, MORE  
SEASONAL TEMPERATURES STARTING WEDNESDAY.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 339 AM CDT SUN SEP 14 2025  
 
IT'S A WARM AND MUGGY START TO OUR DAY ESPECIALLY FOR  
MID-SEPTEMBER STANDARDS, WITH TEMPERATURES IN THE 60S TO LOW-70S.  
ANOTHER UNSEASONABLY WARM DAY IS IN STORE FOR TODAY WITH HIGHS  
RANGING FROM THE LOW-80S WEST (WHERE CLOUD COVER WILL BE THICKEST  
THROUGH THE DAY) TO THE MID-TO-UPPER-80S EAST. DID BLEND IN A BIT OF  
THE NBM 25TH PERCENTILE TO HIGHS FOR TODAY DUE TO THE CLOUD COVER  
FORECASTED. THE MAIN STORY FOR TODAY WILL BE THE CHANCE FOR RAIN AND  
STORMS, WITH THE POTENTIAL FOR ISOLATED SEVERE STORMS AS A  
NEGATIVELY TILTED TROUGH EJECTS OVER THE REGION. AT THE SURFACE, A  
LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM LOCATED OVER WESTERN NEBRASKA WILL LIFT NORTH  
THROUGH WESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA THROUGH THE DAY INTO TONIGHT. MID-LEVEL  
LAPSE RATES ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN FAIRLY WEAK THROUGH THE DAY  
TODAY, AROUND 6-6.5 C/KM AND THE TALL, SKINNY NATURE OF THE  
CAPE PROFILES WILL LIKELY MAKE SUSTAINED UPDRAFTS HARD TO COME  
BY. HOWEVER, ANY UPDRAFT THAT CAN BE MAINTAINED WILL HAVE  
AROUND 35-45 KTS OF BULK SHEAR TO WORK WITH AND SO CAN'T RULE  
OUT ISOLATED SEVERE STORMS. SKIES ARE EXPECTED TO BE MOSTLY  
CLOUDY ACROSS THE AREA TODAY, AND THIS WILL HELP TO LIMIT SOME  
DAYTIME HEATING AND THUS LIMIT THE AMOUNT OF INSTABILITY THAT  
DEVELOPS. HOWEVER, ANYWHERE THAT SEES LONGER PERIODS OF SUNSHINE  
IN THE AFTERNOON WILL HAVE A GREATER POTENTIAL FOR SEEING A  
STRONGER STORM AND SO TRENDS WILL NEED TO BE WATCHED CLOSELY  
THROUGH THE DAY. THE MAIN THREAT WILL BE DAMAGING WIND GUSTS UP  
TO 60 MPH AND MARGINALLY SEVERE HAIL. A TORNADO CANNOT BE  
ENTIRELY RULED OUT CLOSER TO THE SURFACE LOW, BUT BY PEAK  
DAYTIME HEATING THE LOW SHOULD BE MOVING NORTH OF THE AREA AND  
THUS LIMITING THE TORNADO THREAT LOCALLY. ANY SHOWERS AND STORMS  
WILL GENERALLY MOVE SOUTH TO NORTH AS THEY DEVELOP IN TANDEM  
WITH THE SURFACE LOW, BUT WILL ALSO BE GRADUALLY SHIFTING  
EASTWARD WITH THE PUSH FROM THE UPPER-LEVEL WAVE INTO TONIGHT.  
STORMS SHOULD EXIT THE AREA TO THE EAST AFTER 2-3 AM, THOUGH  
WRAP-AROUND LIGHT SHOWERS AROUND THE LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM MAY  
CLIP THE HIGHWAY-14 CORRIDOR THROUGH SUNRISE TOMORROW.  
 
SKIES WILL CLEAR OUT TOMORROW AS THE LOW MOVES INTO SOUTHERN CANADA,  
AND WITH CONTINUED SOUTHERLY FLOW THIS WILL ALLOW FOR ANOTHER  
UNSEASONABLY WARM DAY WITH HIGHS MAINLY IN THE MID-80S. ANOTHER  
TROUGH MOVING ACROSS THE NORTHERN ROCKIES WILL PUSH TOWARDS OUR AREA  
TOMORROW NIGHT, SENDING A WEAK WAVE ACROSS SOUTH-CENTRAL SOUTH  
DAKOTA BY DAYBREAK TUESDAY. THIS MAY HELP FIRE OFF A FEW SHOWERS  
ALONG AND JUST AHEAD OF A COLD FRONT FOR AREAS WEST OF THE JAMES  
RIVER TUESDAY MORNING, BUT THE BETTER CHANCES OF RAIN WILL ARRIVE  
LATE TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY AS THE TROUGH ARRIVES AND PUSHES THE  
FRONT ACROSS THE AREA. THE ATMOSPHERE WILL BE UNSTABLE AHEAD OF THE  
FRONT, SO THUNDERSTORMS ARE LIKELY WITH THIS ACTIVITY. SHEAR MAY BE  
LACKING, BUT CAN'T ENTIRELY RULE OUT A STRONG TO MARGINALLY SEVERE  
STORM TUESDAY AFTERNOON. WITH MOST OF THE AREA EXPECTED TO BE AHEAD  
OF THE WEST-TO-EAST MOVING FRONT ON TUESDAY, ANOTHER WARM DAY IS IN  
STORE WITH HIGHS WELL INTO THE 80S, POTENTIALLY REACHING 90  
OVER PARTS OF NORTHWEST IOWA WHERE THE FRONT MOVES THROUGH LAST.  
 
MOST GUIDANCE SHOWS AN UPPER-LEVEL LOW MOVING OUT OF SOUTHERN CANADA  
RIGHT BEHIND THE LATE-TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY TROUGH, AND THIS COULD  
KEEP GENERAL CLOUDINESS ALONG WITH SPORADIC RAIN CHANCES THROUGH THE  
REMAINDER OF THE WORK WEEK AS IT HANGS AROUND THE REGION. DUE TO THE  
CLOUDS AND THE AFOREMENTIONED FRONTAL PASSAGE, IT'S LOOKING LIKELY  
WE'LL SEE COOLER TEMPERATURES STARTING WEDNESDAY, WITH HIGHS  
RETURNING TO THE 70S AND LOWS IN THE 50S. THE UPPER-LOW FINALLY  
PUSHES EAST OF THE AREA BY THE START OF NEXT WEEKEND, WHICH COULD  
BRING THE RETURN OF MOSTLY SUNNY SKIES UNLESS ANOTHER TROUGH FOLLOWS  
BEHIND IT. BUT AS OF NOW, KEEPING NEXT SATURDAY DRY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1214 PM CDT SUN SEP 14 2025  
 
VFR CONDITIONS CONTINUE OVER MOST OF THE AREA, HOWEVER BUILDUP  
OF CONVECTIVE CLOUDS CONTINUES ALONG AND WEST OF I-29 EARLY THIS  
AFTERNOON. CONFIDENCE REMAINS LOW ON THE COVERAGE AND DURATION  
OF ISOLATED TO SCATTERED STORMS LATER THIS AFTERNOON. AN INITIAL  
AREA OF CONVECTION MAY BEGIN TO TRY TO FORM NEAR OR WEST OF I-29  
AND DRIFT EASTWARD, WITH A SECONDARY AREA OF PRECIPITATION  
FORMING NEAR OR WEST OF THE JAMES RIVER LATER THIS EVENING. WILL  
KEEP PREVAILING TSRA/SHRA LIMITED AND FOCUS MORE ON LOWER  
PROBABILITY GROUPS GIVEN UNCERTAINTY. PERHAPS HIGHEST CONFIDENCE  
ON IMPACTS WILL BE THIS EVENING AND INTO THE EARLY OVERNIGHT  
HOURS, AND WILL INSERT VICINITY MENTION AT BOTH FSD/SUX.  
OCCASIONAL MVFR TO IFR VISIBILITY MAY BE POSSIBLE IN HEAVIER  
RAIN.  
 
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS MOVE EAST AND/OR DISSIPATE EARLY IN  
THE OVERNIGHT LEAVING VFR CONDITIONS IN MOST AREAS AND A  
SOUTHWESTERLY WIND. WILL NEED TO WATCH THE HON AREA FOR LOWER  
STRATUS THAT MAY TRY TO BUILD INTO THE AREA AFTER MIDNIGHT.  
 

 
   
FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
SD...NONE.  
MN...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
DISCUSSION...SAMET  
AVIATION...DUX  
 
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