textproduct: Aberdeen

This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.

KEY MESSAGES

- Light snow of a couple of tenths or less is possible over mainly north central SD from mid morning through mid afternoon. Little to no accumulations are expected elsewhere as mainly light snow sinks south and ends by mid afternoon.

- As temperatures cool behind a passing cold front this morning, rain will mix with and then change to snow. At most, only a couple of tenths of an inch of snow on grassy surfaces is expected.

- Winds out of the north will slowly weaken through the day, with gusts of 25 to 30 mph lingering the longest over south central and northeastern South Dakota.

- Highs in the upper 30s to 40s will be roughly 5 degrees below normal today and Friday. Above normal temperatures return for the weekend, with highs in the 60s and 70s.

UPDATE

Issued at 1017 AM CDT Thu Mar 26 2026

Temperatures continue to either remain steady or still drop as of 15Z this morning. The temperature trend has been adjusted, along with lowering the high temperatures slightly today. Otherwise, the chance of mainly light snow has been increased for along the ND/SD border for the next couple of hours, before the potential diminishes while sinking south.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 131 AM CDT Thu Mar 26 2026

Currently (~06Z) monitoring a cold front dropping into the forecast area, which will help facilitate precipitation development early this morning. There is still quite a bit of uncertainty in where exactly the band of precipitation will set up this morning. In general, there seems to be a trend across model guidance to bring a stripe of 0.10"+ further south and into northern South Dakota. With such a narrow band being resolved, precipitation amounts may vary significantly over a short location. To add to the complexity, there is decent disagreement between the CAMs on the highest precipitation amounts. There are a few models still putting out some more aggressive totals (between a quarter of an inch and half an inch through the event), but the latest runs seem to trend towards a tenth to a quarter of an inch of liquid equivalent at the most.

Precipitation type adds yet another layer to tonight's forecast. With the passage of the cold front, the profile will cool down and potentially facilitate a transition to snow this morning. Expecting most of the precipitation to fall as rain, as temperatures won't reach below freezing at the surface until near sunrise this morning. However still expecting that transition once both the upper-levels cool and begin producing ice aloft as well as those surface temperatures dropping below freezing. Can't rule out freezing rain either, although warm ground temperatures may limit potential for any accumulation there. Overall only expecting a couple hundredths of liquid equivalent to fall as winter precip, with fairly minimal impacts overall.

Behind the front, winds turn northerly and increase, and are expected to peak during the morning hours today. Expecting a shallow mixing layer, which will limit the ability of the strongest winds aloft to mix down. Low to mid-level winds are also expected to push south through the day today, limiting the potential in the afternoon as well. Still, gusts up to 30-40 miles per hour will be possible this morning, diminishing slowly through the afternoon and evening hours. The gusty winds lingering in the afternoon (25-30 miles per hour) will create some elevated fire weather concerns over much of the area, but minimum humidity upwards of 45 percent will keep conditions from becoming critical.

850mb temperatures today drop behind the front, ranging from 0 to -5 Celsius, which is roughly the daily median to 25th percentile respectively. As a result, expect slightly below normal temperatures (highs in the upper 30s to 40s) today, including poor temperature recovery this afternoon leading to a non-diurnal temperature trend. A reinforcing shot of cold air advection comes early Friday morning in the form of a brief period of strong low to mid-level winds (with the jet aloft reaching upwards of 50 knots). However, not expecting strong mixing to the surface overnight, so only forecasting a couple hours of 20-25 mile per hour gusts overnight. Still, this cold air advection continues the slightly below normal temperatures Friday, keeping highs once again in the upper 30s to 40s.

Another longwave ridge is set to move over the western CONUS this weekend, a familiar pattern that will allow for a warm airmass to return to the Northern Plains. Expect temperatures above normal for late March, with highs in the 60s and 70s through at least the weekend. These warm temperatures (and associated humidity values) may help create elevated fire weather concerns this weekend when combined with winds. Unlike recent longwave setups over the past month, ensemble cluster are supportive of the ridge continuing its progression eastward, giving way to a longwave trough by the end of the week. With the arrival of this trough will come the return of precipitation chances. Uncertainty is still high so far out, so more details on this system will come with later forecasts, should it even materialize over the Aberdeen forecast area.

AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z FRIDAY/

Issued at 629 AM CDT Thu Mar 26 2026

Terminals KABR,KATY,KPIR,KMBG

Satellite imagery and the latest guidance shows post-frontal stratus developing/spreading south across the region. KMBG and KABR are already MVFR/IFR, and KPIR/KATY are expected to get into this stratus cloudiness within the next couple of hours. Expecting this sub-VFR low cloudiness to persist for several hours today before any improvement has a chance of happening. Currently, all four terminals are in between areas of precipitation. Guidance suggests that between now and 21Z, the terminals that stand the best chance of experiencing light snow precipitation are KMBG/KPIR as bands of precipitation lift out of the central and northern high plains, spreading across the western Dakotas, before running into increasingly dry low levels and dissipating. The northerly winds gusting to 25 to 35 knots will gradually subside late this afternoon through late this evening.

ABR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

SD...None. MN...None.


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