414  
FXUS63 KFSD 041752  
AFDFSD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD  
1252 PM CDT THU JUN 4 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- PORTIONS OF SOUTHEAST SOUTH DAKOTA AND SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA  
WILL SEE A LEVEL 2 OF 5 RISK FOR SEVERE STORMS LATE THIS  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING, WITH LESSER RISKS FARTHER EAST AND  
SOUTH. LARGE HAIL AND DAMAGING WINDS ARE THE PRIMARY THREATS,  
WITH AN ISOLATED TORNADO ALSO POSSIBLE.  
 
- SOME AGREEMENT ON THE BETTER CHANCE FOR SCATTERED  
THUNDERSTORMS CONTAINING HEAVY RAIN TO BE GENERALLY NEAR  
HIGHWAY 14 LATER TODAY INTO TONIGHT. CONFIDENCE IS FAIRLY LOW  
HOWEVER AS THERE ARE QUITE A FEW DIFFERENCES ACROSS MANY  
MODELS.  
 
- HEAVY RAIN, ROUGHLY 2-5 INCHES, FELL ACROSS PARTS OF HAMLIN  
AND DEUEL COUNTIES YESTERDAY EVENING. WILL HAVE TO SEE WHAT  
AFFECT THIS HAS ON THE BIG SIOUX RIVER IN BROOKINGS COUNTY,  
POSSIBLY COUPLED WITH ADDITIONAL RAINFALL TODAY AND TONIGHT.  
 
- WHILE DETAILS ARE FAR MORE UNCERTAIN, AN ISOLATED TO  
SCATTERED SEVERE STORM RISK WILL LINGER INTO FRIDAY. THE  
GREATER RISKS AT THIS TIME SHIFT SOUTHEAST INTO EASTERN  
NEBRASKA, IOWA AND FAR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA.  
 
- TEMPERATURES REMAIN IN THE 80S THROUGH THE WEEK AND RISE  
TOWARDS THE LOW 90S BY THE END OF THE WEEKEND.  
 
 
   
UPDATE  
 
ISSUED AT 258 AM CDT THU JUN 4 2026  
 
THE RIGHT ENTRANCE REGION OF THE UPPER LEVEL JET WILL EXIT THE AREA  
THROUGH THE AFTERNOON. THIS WILL BRING A WEAK WAVE TO NE INTO  
NORTHWEST IA BY AFTERNOON AND COULD MAINTAIN AND AREA OF SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH THE DAY OVER PARTS OF NORTHEAST NE AND  
NORTHWEST IA. THIS WILL KEEP SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS OVER THESE  
AREAS THROUGH THE DAY INTO TONIGHT. FOR NOW THESE STORMS SHOULD NOT  
BE SEVERE OR AT LEAST ANY SEVERE WEATHER WILL BE VERY ISOLATED. TO  
THE NORTH CLEARING IS EXPECTED TODAY WITH INSTABILITY EXPECTED TO  
BUILD THROUGH MID TO LATE AFTERNOON. STILL SOME DETAILS TO WORK OUT  
ON JUST WHERE THE LOWER LEVEL BOUNDARY WILL BE, BUT A WAVE IS  
EXPECTED TO MOVE INTO CENTRAL AND NORTHERN SD THIS AFTERNOON AND  
EVENING. AHEAD OF THIS WAVE SOUTHERLY FLOW WILL INCREASE A BIT, WITH  
THE THE 925-850 MB WARM FRONT EXPECTED TO SET UP SOMEWHERE CLOSE TO  
HIGHWAY 14. WHILE DEEPER LAYER SHEAR WILL ONLY BE ON THE WEAKER  
SIDE, ROUGHLY 30 KNOTS, CAPE VALUES WILL CLIMB TO 1500-2000 J/KG.  
THIS SHOULD SUPPORT A FEW STRONG UPDRAFTS WITH HAIL TO THE SIZE OF  
PING PONG BALLS AND WIND GUSTS TO 65 MPH. HOWEVER, WITH FREEZING  
LEVELS ABOUT 11.5-12 KFT AND POSSIBLE TRAINING OF CELLS HEAVY RAIN  
MAY BECOME A THREAT. THE LATEST GEFS AND CANADIAN ENSEMBLES ARE  
POINTING TOWARDS A GOOD CHANCE (30-40 PERCENT) OF MORE THAN AN INCH  
OF RAIN NEAR AND NORTH OF HIGHWAY 14. THE 6Z HRRR, 0Z RRFS AND 0Z  
WRF ARW ALL POINT TO THIS LOCATION AS WELL WITH POCKETS OF 2-4", SO  
WILL NEED TO KEEP A CLOSE EYE ON WHERE EVERYTHING SETS UP THURSDAY  
AFTERNOON. THE KFSD RADAR INDICATES A SOLID CORE OF 3-5" OF RAIN  
JUST NORTH OF BROOKINGS COUNTY WITH 1-3" OF RAIN ACROSS NORTHERN  
PARTS OF BROOKINGS COUNTY INTO NORTHERN PARTS OF LINCOLN AND LYON  
COUNTIES IN MN AS WELL.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 304 PM CDT WED JUN 3 2026  
 
AN ACTIVE FEW DAYS ARE IN STORE FOR THE REGION BEGINNING THIS  
AFTERNOON AS AN UPPER TROUGH LOCATED OVER ALBERTA SENDS SEVERAL  
WAVES THROUGH THE REGION. THROUGH THE DAY TODAY A DEEP, WARM  
LAYER OF MOIST AIR WILL ADVECT INTO THE REGION FROM THE SOUTH.  
HIGHS WILL CLIMB INTO THE 80S WITH DEW POINTS IN THE MID 60S.  
PLENTIFUL INSTABILITY (1500-2500+ J/KG) WILL BUILD INTO THE  
REGION AHEAD OF AN APPROACHING COLD FRONT. THIS COMBINED WITH  
STEEP LOW AND MID-LEVEL LAPSE RATES, AN INCREASING LLJ, VEERING  
WINDS ALOFT (CLOCKWISE HODOGRAPHS), IN ADDITION TO STRONG  
DIVERGENCE ALOFT SET THE STAGE FOR ISOLATED TO SCATTERED STRONG  
TO SEVERE SUPERCELL THUNDERSTORMS TO FORM OVER CENTRAL SOUTH  
DAKOTA LATE THIS AFTERNOON. LOW LCL TO LFC HEIGHTS, INCREASING  
HELICITY AND VORTICITY ADVECTION, AND FAVORABLE SHEAR PROFILES  
(INITIALLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE FRONT) INDICATE THAT TORNADOS  
MAY BE POSSIBLE WITH INITIAL SUPERCELL FORMATION. ONE OR TWO OF  
THOSE TORNADOES COULD BE STRONG, AS INDICATED IN THE SPC DAY 1  
OUTLOOK SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2 OF 5). IN ADDITION, LARGE HAIL UP  
TO 2+ INCHES AND DAMAGING WIND GUSTS UP TO 70 MPH ARE POSSIBLE.  
CAMS GUIDANCE VARIES A BIT IN TIMING OF INITIALIZATION, BUT MOST  
LIKELY IT WILL BE BETWEEN 4-6 PM. STORMS WILL PROGRESS EASTWARD  
THROUGH THE EVENING AND OVERNIGHT. AS SHEAR BECOMES MORE  
PARALLEL TO THE FRONT, EXPECT THAT STORMS WILL GROW UPSCALE INTO  
A QUASI-LINEAR SYSTEM WITH ONE OR MORE BOWING SEGMENTS. THE  
THREAT WILL THEN TRANSITION TO DAMAGING WIND GUSTS, HOWEVER A  
FEW BRIEF SPIN UP TORNADO ALONG THE LEADING EDGE AND HAIL REMAIN  
POSSIBLE. TIMING OF STORMS ENTERING THE I-29 CORRIDOR REGION  
AGAIN VARIES BASED ON GUIDANCE, BUT IN GENERAL BETWEEN 10 PM AND  
MIDNIGHT. STORMS SHOULD THEN WEAKEN AS THE MOVE EAST, EXITING  
BY EARLY TO MID-THURSDAY MORNING. AS FAR AS RAIN TOTALS GO, A  
QUARTER TO THREE QUARTERS OF AN INCH IS POSSIBLE. WITH A FEW  
ISOLATED AREAS SEEING UP TO 1+ INCHES. WIDESPREAD FLOODING IS  
NOT EXPECTED, BUT AREAS THAT HAVE SEEN RECENT RAINS MAY  
EXPERIENCE ISOLATED FLOODING.  
 
THURSDAY WILL BE SIMILAR IN THAT ANOTHER DEEP LAYER OF MOISTURE  
RICH, WARM AIR WILL ADVECT NORTH INTO THE REGION DURING THE DAY.  
WHILE HIGHS MAY BE LIMITED SLIGHTLY DUE TO LINGERING CLOUDS, THEY  
ARE STILL EXPECTED TO REACH CONVECTIVE TEMPERATURES IN THE 80S. WITH  
DEW POINTS CLIMBING INTO THE UPPER 60S AND LOW 70S, IT WILL BE  
ANOTHER HUMID DAY. WITH THE MOISTURE COMES RENEWED INSTABILITY.  
DYNAMIC PARAMETER'S ARE ALL SUFFICIENT AGAIN FOR STRONG TO  
SEVERE STORM DEVELOPMENT AS OUTLINED IN SPC DAY 2 SLIGHT RISK  
(LEVEL 2 OF 5). THE DIFFERENCE THURSDAY WILL BE THAT TWO AREAS  
OF DEVELOPMENT WILL BE POSSIBLE, AND ONE MAY IMPACT THE OTHER.  
THE FIRST OVER NORTHWEST IOWA WHERE WAA LOOKS TO TRIGGER SHOWERS  
AND THUNDERSTORMS IN THE LATE AFTERNOON AND EVENING. THIS  
NORTHWARD PUSH OF WARM AIR PUSHES AGAINST A SOUTHEASTWARD  
ADVANCING COLD FRONT, CAUSING IT TO STALL OUT. AS WE CONTINUE  
INTO THE EVENING, STORM INITIATION WILL OCCUR AS UPSLOPE FLOW  
ENCOUNTERS THE STALLED FRONT. WITH A SIMILAR DYNAMIC SETUP AS  
TODAY, STRONG TO SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ARE ONCE AGAIN POSSIBLE.  
LARGE HAIL AND DAMAGING WIND GUSTS WILL BE THE PRIMARY THREATS,  
HOWEVER TORNADOES WILL ALSO BE POSSIBLE AT STORM INITIATION.  
OVERNIGHT STORMS WILL GROW UPSCALE INTO A LINE WITH WIND  
BECOMING THE PRIMARY THREAT.  
 
FRIDAY WILL BE ANOTHER DAY OF INCREASED RISK FOR STRONG TO SEVERE  
THUNDERSTORMS. HOWEVER, THIS ROUND WILL BE HIGHLY DEPENDENT ON HOW  
THE PREVIOUS ROUND PLAYED OUT. LIGHT SHOWERS WILL HANG AROUND  
THROUGH THE MORNING, FEEDING OFF REMNANT OUTFLOW BOUNDARIES. FRIDAY  
AFTERNOON UPPER RIDGING TO THE WEST AND HIGH PRESSURE AT THE SURFACE  
BEGIN TO PUSH INTO THE REGION. THIS FORCES THE SURFACE LOW AND QUASI-  
STATIONARY BOUNDARY TO JUMP SOUTHEAST. TIMING OF THIS JUMP WILL  
HAVE A LARGE IMPACT ON WHEN AND WHERE STORM FORMATION WILL TAKE  
PLACE. CURRENT GUIDANCE INDICATES STORMS ARE MORE LIKELY TO  
FORM OVER NORTHWEST IOWA, JUST SOUTHEAST OF THE CWA BORDER.  
HOWEVER, THERE ARE LARGE DIFFERENCES IN GUIDANCE, AND THEREFORE  
CERTAINTY IN TIMING IS LOW. ONCE STORMS DO FORM, THEY WILL HAVE  
THE POTENTIAL TO BE STRONG TO SEVERE AS OUTLINED BY THE SPC DAY  
3 SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2 OF 5).  
 
SATURDAY WE FINALLY GET A BREAK FROM STORMS WITH A DRY FORECAST.  
HIGHS LOOK TO CLIMB INTO THE 80S AND 90S WITH SLIGHTLY BREEZY  
SOUTHEAST WINDS. DURING THE DAY SUNDAY ALSO LOOKS TO BE DRY WITH  
ANOTHER DAY OF 80S AND 90S AND BREEZY SOUTHEAST WINDS. STORM CHANCES  
RETURN LATE SUNDAY NIGHT AND CONTINUE INTO THE FIRST PORTION OF NEXT  
WEEK. HOWEVER, MODEL DIVERGENCE INCREASES GREATLY, KEEPING  
CONFIDENCE LOW.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z FRIDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1249 PM CDT THU JUN 4 2026  
 
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL DEVELOP THROUGH THE  
AFTERNOON AND ESPECIALLY INTO THE EVENING AND OVERNIGHT HOURS. THE  
BEST CHANCE OF STORMS WILL BE NEAR HIGHWAY 14 WEST OF I-29 INTO  
SOUTH-CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA. THIS PUTS THE GREATEST CONFIDENCE FOR  
STORMS OVER KHON, ESPECIALLY FOR THE OVERNIGHT ROUND. OTHERWISE, LOW  
STRATUS LOOKS TO DEVELOP NEAR AND EAST OF I-29 TONIGHT INTO TOMORROW  
MORNING WHERE STORM CHANCES ARE THE LOWEST. THIS WILL BRING MAINLY  
MVFR CONDITIONS TO THOSE AREAS, BUT LOCALLY IFR CIGS WILL BE  
POSSIBLE ESPECIALLY OVER NORTHWEST IOWA AND FAR NORTHEAST NEBRASKA.  
 
WE'LL SEE WINDS INCREASE SLIGHTLY THROUGH THE AFTERNOON, SUSTAINED  
AROUND 5-15 KTS, HIGHEST IN SOUTH-CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA. WINDS WILL  
BECOME LIGHT AND VARIABLE TO CALM OVERNIGHT, AND REMAIN ON THE  
LIGHTER SIDE INTO TOMORROW MORNING. STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS WILL  
BRING A RISK OF HIGHER WIND GUSTS, LOCALLY AS HIGH AS 50 KTS  
THROUGH ABOUT 05.07Z.  
 
 
   
FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
SD...NONE.  
MN...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
UPDATE...08  
DISCUSSION...AJP  
AVIATION...SAMET  
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