Your favorites:

Omemee, North Dakota Weather Forecast Discussion

079
FXUS63 KBIS 141156
AFDBIS

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Bismarck ND 656 AM CDT Sun Sep 14 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Showers and embedded thunderstorms will return to most of western and central North Dakota this morning and afternoon, lasting on and off through Monday.

- Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across central North Dakota this afternoon and evening, with a tornado or two possible.

- Highs mostly in the 70s through Tuesday, then cooling into the 60s by the end of the work week.

&&

.UPDATE... Issued at 656 AM CDT Sun Sep 14 2025

Observational trends show areas of dense fog across northwest and central North Dakota, but visibility tends to vary greatly over short distances. Where the fog is dense, it has not appeared to remain under a half mile for a long period of time, for the most part. Will continue to handle this with a Special Weather Statement.

A few stray showers have developed in northwest North Dakota. Farther south, more widespread showers with isolated thunderstorms are approaching southwest and south central North Dakota. The showers and storms should continue to grow in coverage from south to north throughout the day.

&&

.DISCUSSION... Issued at 510 AM CDT Sun Sep 14 2025

Longwave trough axis extends from along the Alberta/Saskatchewan border to Colorado early this morning, placing the Northern Plains under southerly flow aloft. A nearly saturated near-surface layer with light winds has allowed areas of fog to develop across much of western and central North Dakota. The coverage of dense fog reducing visibility under half a mile has not been as prevalent thus far. Would not be surprised to see conditions deteriorate closer to sunrise.

A closed upper low at the base of the longwave trough will translate northward today, kicking the trough axis into the Northern and Central High Plains and shortening its wavelength. The strong poleward differential advection of cyclonic vorticity combined with upper level divergence should bring another round of widespread showers and embedded thunderstorms to much of western and central North Dakota later this morning through tonight. The origins of this can already be seen moving up the Missouri River Valley in South Dakota. Through this afternoon, the highest probabilities for rain are along a longitudinal axis that roughly covers areas along and west of the Highway 83 corridor. Directly to the east, modest diurnal heating could yield SBCAPE approaching 2000 J/kg, which may be uncapped or only very weakly capped given the moisture-rich boundary layer with dewpoints forecast in the mid to upper 60s. Most CAMs develop a few clusters of convection along and between the corridors of Highways 83 and 281 by mid afternoon, with quick northward motion. Storm mode could be messy given the strong mid to upper level forcing and lack of a well-defined surface or low level boundary. Any surface based storm would likely have access to effective bulk shear around 30-35 kts, which would be supportive of severe storms. Ingredients for large hail and damaging wind are mostly on the lower end of the severe spectrum. However, there is a potential that the most pertinent hazard from severe storms today could actually be tornadoes. A corridor of strong low level SRH (around 100 m^2/s^2) and shear (around 15-20 kts) is forecast to be collocated with more buoyant air mass with very low LCLs, and forecast hodographs are showing classic long-looping signatures. One potential limiting factor is that both deterministic and ensemble kinematic and thermodynamic two-dimensional fields indicate that favorable conditions for tornadogenesis may be very limited temporally at any given location, translating with the mean atmospheric flow. This limitation also appears in forecast hodographs, as there is only an hour or two of crosswise vorticity at any given site. Therefore, we will message the potential for a tornado or two along with the base severe hazards of quarter size hail and 60 mph winds. Locally excessive rainfall could also be a concern yet again this afternoon through tonight. Precipitable water is projected to remain near or at climatological maximum values, and the HREF localized probability-matched mean QPF shows several pockets of +2 inches.

Surface cyclogenesis attendant to the mid/upper low is forecast by tonight, with the system quickly projected to become stacked. Compared to a traditional low, this one is forecast to be essentially sideways, with the warm front pointing due north and the wrap-around deformation band focused in the southwest quadrant. Models still show timing uncertainty with the departure of the low into Canada, generally from around early afternoon to late evening. This keeps high chances for showers but comparatively lower chances for thunderstorms in the forecast on Monday, decreasing from south to north in the afternoon through the evening. Some high-resolution models are also now showing a much stronger surface low entering southwest Manitoba Monday afternoon, with tightly packed isobars on the southern flank across northern North Dakota. This outcome would likely cause windy conditions across the north Monday afternoon, with reasonable worst-case scenario gusts exceeding 50 mph (per the 06Z HRRR). There is still too much uncertainty to include strong winds in the gridded forecast and messaging, but it is something that will need to be monitored with future model runs.

Not long after the departure of the low late Monday, another wave deepening over the Northern Rockies will begin sending DCVA into the region on Tuesday, which keeps a 20 to 40 percent chance of rain in the forecast. Guidance then shows another shortwave digging down from Canada on Wednesday. This wave is likely to bring a cooler air mass into the region, which may hold through the end of the week as the wave interacts with the other aforementioned wave and meanders around the Upper Midwest. The NBM maintains a 30 percent chance of rain on Wednesday, followed by only a 20 percent chance Thursday through Saturday.

For today through Tuesday, high temperatures are mostly expected to be in the 70s, though parts of southwest and south central North Dakota could stay in the mid to upper 60s should it rain most of the day. Ensembles then show a distinct cool down for the second half of the week, with highs mostly in the 60s Thursday through Saturday. Forecast lows tonight remain closer to summertime values of mid 50s to lower 60s, then gradually cool to around 45 to 50 for the second half of the week.

&&

.AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY/... Issued at 656 AM CDT Sun Sep 14 2025

Low ceilings will continue to impact most of western and central North Dakota this morning, with fog and mist also reducing visibility at times. Conditions should improve to prevailing VFR by early afternoon, but some MVFR ceilings could linger across central North Dakota. MVFR, if not IFR, ceilings are then expected to return to central North Dakota later this evening through tonight.

Showers and embedded thunderstorms will once again become more widespread from south to north later this morning through the evening. The highest chances for rain are at KBIS during the late morning and afternoon, and at KMOT during the late afternoon and evening. MVFR to IFR visibility from rain can be expected at times, and a few stronger storms could produce gusty winds. Otherwise, winds should remain light and variable.

&&

.BIS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

&&

$$

UPDATE...Hollan DISCUSSION...Hollan AVIATION...Hollan

NWS BIS Office Area Forecast Discussion

WeatherForYou.com, LLC is not responsible for any damages or problems caused by this service. Current weather conditions are obtained from the closest government operated station, a personal station contributing to the PWSweather.com network or from the Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System (MADIS). Some weather information is powered by XWeather. WeatherForYou.com, NOAA, AerisWeather and their data providers disclaim liability of any kind whatsoever, including, without limitation, liability for quality, performance, merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose arising out of the use or inability to use the data. Like all things, this site belongs to Jesus Christ ... He just trusts us to maintain it. If you have any questions or comments please use the suggestion box.

Copyright © 1999 - 2025, WeatherForYou.com LLC. All rights reserved.