849  
FXUS63 KFSD 100518  
AFDFSD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD  
1218 AM CDT FRI JUL 10 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- DIMINISHING THUNDERSTORMS ARRIVE LATE TONIGHT, AND COULD  
LINGER INTO DAYBREAK FRIDAY. SEVERE STORMS NOT ANTICIPATED.  
 
- OUTSIDE OF A VERY LOCALIZED RISK FOR THUNDERSTORMS LATE FRIDAY  
AFTERNOON FROM ROUGHLY I-29 AND EAST, A DRY FORECAST INTO  
NEXT WEEK IS ANTICIPATED.  
 
- TEMPERATURES THROUGH THE UPCOMING 7 DAYS WILL TREND WARMER,  
WITH WIDESPREAD HIGHS IN THE 90S TO NEAR 100 THROUGH MUCH OF  
NEXT WEEK. 1-2 DAYS MAY FEATURE HEAT ADVISORY CONDITIONS. THE  
CUMULATIVE NATURE OF THE HEAT COULD LEAD TO HEAT ILLNESS.  
 

 
   
UPDATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 913 PM CDT THU JUL 9 2026  
 
STORMS OVER WESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA CONTINUE TO MOVE SOUTHEAST. AS THEY  
APPROACH THE WESTERN EDGE OF OUR CWA THEY WILL ENCOUNTER AN  
INCREASINGLY MORE STABLE ENVIRONMENT. THE BEST INSTABILITY FLOWS  
ALONG WITH THE WAVE AND MOVES TO THE SOUTHEAST INTO CENTRAL  
NEBRASKA, AND THE STORMS ARE EXPECTED TO FOLLOW ALONG THAT GRADIENT.  
A FEW ISOLATED, WEAKENING STORMS MAY CROSS THE MISSOURI RIVER INTO  
SOUTH CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA. THESE ARE NOT ANTICIPATED TO BE SEVERE  
BUT COULD PRODUCE SOME SMALL HAIL AND WIND GUSTS TO 45 MPH. ANY  
STORMS THAT MAKE IT ACROSS THE RIVER WILL QUICKLY DISSIPATE. WE WILL  
CONTINUE TO SEE MID TO UPPER LEVEL CLOUDS FLOW IN OFF THE ANVILS OF  
THESE STORMS RESULTING IN PARTLY TO MOSTLY CLOUDY SKIES OVERNIGHT  
AND INTO FRIDAY. LOWS TONIGHT WILL BE AROUND AVERAGE FOR THIS TIME  
OF YEAR, IN THE LOW TO MID 60S.  
 
EARLY FRIDAY MORNING ANOTHER AREA OF THUNDERSTORMS MAY DEVELOP ALONG  
A SURFACE BOUNDARY IN EASTERN NORTH DAKOTA THAT WILL ADVANCE SOUTH  
INTO EASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA AND SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA. AN AREA OF LOW TO  
MODERATE INSTABILITY WILL FUEL THESE STORMS. BUT LACK OF SHEAR  
WILL KEEP THEM MORE OF A PULSE TYPE STORM THAN SUPERCELLULAR.  
HAIL TO THE SIZE OF A QUARTER AND WIND GUSTS WILL BE THE PRIMARY  
THREATS. STORMS WILL RAPIDLY DISSIPATE BY MID MORNING, HOWEVER  
THE WEAK BOUNDARY/MCV MAY LINGER INTO THE AFTERNOON. THROUGH THE  
REST OF FRIDAY CLOUDS WILL GRADUALLY THIN BECOMING MOSTLY SUNNY  
IN THE AFTERNOON. LIGHT AND VARIABLE WINDS WILL BECOME  
SOUTHERLY BUT REMAIN LIGHT. BY FRIDAY EVENING THE PREVIOUSLY  
MENTIONED LINGERING BOUNDARY/MCV WILL WORK AS A FOCUS FOR  
ANOTHER ROUND OF PULSY, POSSIBLY STRONG THUNDERSTORMS. STORMS  
EXPECTED MAINLY EAST OF I-29 WITH THREATS OF HAIL TO THE SIZE OF  
A QUARTER AND WIND GUSTS TO 60 MPH.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 143 PM CDT THU JUL 9 2026  
 
THIS AFTERNOON: QUIET CONDITIONS ARE LIKELY THIS AFTERNOON AS WINDS  
REMAIN LIGHT AND VARIABLE.  
 
TONIGHT: SCATTERED CONVECTION THAT FORMS OVER THE WESTERN HIGH  
PLAINS WILL BEGIN TO ROLL EASTWARD THROUGH THE EVENING HOURS AS A  
SHORTWAVE MOVES INTO THE REGION. THE MAJORITY OF INSTABILITY REMAINS  
BOTTLED UP OVER THE WEST RIVER AREAS THROUGH THE EVENING, AND AS  
CONVECTION SLIDES EASTWARD IT'S LIKELY TO DIMINISH QUICKLY BY  
TIME IT REACHES THE CWA. A FEW GUSTY WINDS WITH DECAYING SHOWERS  
COULD STILL BE POSSIBLE INTO SOUTH CENTRAL SD. THE REMNANT AREA  
OF VORTICITY MAY DRIFT INTO NORTHERN NEBRASKA, AND COULD KEEP A  
LOW RISK FOR CONVECTION THROUGH DAYBREAK IN THE MO RIVER  
VALLEY.  
 
FRIDAY: A SECONDARY AREA OF CONVECTION MAY FORM OVER CENTRAL ND  
LATE TONIGHT, AND SLOWLY DRIFT INTO NORTHEASTERN SD BY MID-MORNING  
FRIDAY. A POTENTIAL MCV COULD LINGER INTO FRIDAY AFTERNOON OVER THE  
SD PORTIONS OF THE BUFFALO RIDGE, AND WITH THAT AREA ON THE EDGE OF  
THE LOW-LVL EML, CAN'T RULE OUT ISOLATED TO SCATTERED CONVECTION  
FORMING AFTER 4-5PM. FROM A PARAMETER PERSPECTIVE, MLCAPE  
VALUES REMAIN NEAR 2000 J/KG, BUT EFFECTIVE SHEAR IS VERY WEAK,  
SUGGESTING ONLY PULSE STRONG STORMS WITH WIND AND BRIEF HAIL  
COULD BE POSSIBLE INTO SW MINNESOTA DURING THE EVENING. AS  
INSTABILITY PULLS NORTHWARD IN THE EVENING THE SEVERE WEATHER  
RISK SHOULD DIMINISH QUICKLY. ELSEWHERE, A BREEZY SOUTHWEST WIND  
WILL PUSH HIGHS INTO THE UPPER 80S TO LOWER 90S.  
 
THIS WEEKEND: MID-LVL HEIGHTS BEGIN TO RISE QUICKLY AS WE HEAD INTO  
THE WEEKEND, WHICH WILL BEGIN A STEAD UPWARDS RISE IN TEMPERATURES.  
ONE THING TO NOTE IN RECENT GUIDANCE IS THAT SURFACE WINDS SATURDAY  
AND SUNDAY REMAIN MORE FROM THE SOUTHEAST AND RATHER LIGHT, WHICH  
COULD HOLD DOWN THE EXTREME CLIMB IN HIGHS SUGGESTED A FEW DAYS AGO.  
WE'LL ALSO SEE A BIT MORE MIX DOWN OF DRY AIR AS SOUNDINGS HAVE ALSO  
TRENDED A BIT DRIER, THIS WILL ALLOW AFTERNOON DEW POINTS TO FALL  
AND KEEP HEAT INDEX VALUES BELOW CRITICAL LIMITS.  
 
MONDAY-THURSDAY: A DRY AND HOT WEEK IS EXPECTED IN THE REGION AS A  
600+ DM 500 MB RIDGE CENTERS ITSELF OVER THE CWA. THE PLACEMENT OF  
THE RIDGE PREVENT ANY STORM DEVELOPMENT, BUT ALLOW TEMPERATURES TO  
CLIMB THROUGH THE 90S MOST DAYS. CONFIDENCE IS HIGH THAT WE'LL SEE  
TEMPERATURES IN THE MIDDLE TO UPPER 90S IN MOST LOCATIONS, WITH SOME  
AREAS REACHING 100 ALONG AND WEST OF THE JAMES RIVER VALLEY. THE EC  
ENSEMBLE SUPPORTS THIS IDEA WITH 60%+ PROBABILITIES ALONG THE JAMES  
RIVER VALLEY MONDAY-THURSDAY. WITH AFTERNOON DEW POINTS MIXING DOWN  
AT LEAST INTO THE UPPER 50S TO LOWER 60S, THIS SHOULD PREVENT  
WIDESPREAD HEAT INDEX READINGS OVER 100 DEGREES. WHILE THE DAY TO  
DAY NUMBERS MAY NOT BE EXTREME, THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF THE HEAT  
COULD LEAD TO HEALTH RELATED STRAIN BY MID-LATE WEEK.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1216 AM CDT FRI JUL 10 2026  
 
VFR CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED FOR THE PERIOD. MID TO HIGH LEVEL CLOUDS  
CONTINUE TO FLOW IN FROM STORMS TO THE SOUTHWEST IN CENTRAL  
NEBRASKA. THESE ARE NOT EXPECTED TO IMPACT FLIGHT OPERATIONS. WINDS  
WILL BE LIGHT AND VARIABLE. AREAS OF NORTHWEST IOWA MAY SEE SOME  
PATCHY DENSE FOG IN THE FEW HOURS PRECEDING SUNRISE. FOG SHOULD  
BURN OFF BY MID MORNING.  
 
LOW CHANCES (<25%) FOR RAIN AND POSSIBLY WEAK THUNDERSTORMS  
BEGINNING FRIDAY MORNING AROUND 6 AM AND CONTINUING THROUGH  
AROUND 10 AM. A WEAKLY UNSTABLE ENVIRONMENT MAY SUPPORT THUNDER  
AND A FEW WIND GUSTS TO 45 MPH, BUT SEVERE WEATHER IS NOT  
ANTICIPATED. THESE ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN IN EAST CENTRAL SOUTH  
DAKOTA AND SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA.  
 
A SECOND ROUND OF SHOWERS AND STORMS ARE POSSIBLE IN THE AFTERNOON  
FROM AROUND 4 PM UNTIL ROUGHLY 10 PM. BETTER INSTABILITY BUT WEAKLY  
SHEARED MEANS THESE STORMS WILL LIKELY BE PULSY IN NATURE. SOME MAY  
BRIEFLY PRODUCE HAIL TO THE SIZE OF A QUARTER AND WIND GUSTS TO 60  
MPH. THIS ROUND IS EXPECTED TO BE LOCATED ROUGHLY ALONG AND EAST  
OF I-29 INTO SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA AND NORTHWEST IOWA.  
 

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

 
 

 
 
UPDATE...AJP  
DISCUSSION...DUX  
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