textproduct: Detroit/Pontiac

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

- A Wind Advisory remains in effect along/south of I-69 today for southwesterly gusts to 45 mph.

- Seasonably cooler this weekend with light snow likely Saturday night and on Sunday. An inch to localized 2 inches is most likely.

- Cold Monday into Monday night with wind chill in the single digits at times.

- Additional opportunities for snowfall late Tuesday into Wednesday.

DISCUSSION

Center of low pressure has migrated over northern Lower MI with KDTX VAD wind profile starting to sample 50 kt within its LLJ the past hour. Abundant stratus is limiting mixing depths which has dampened the surface wind response compared to earlier today, but will hold on to the Wind Advisory as the LLJ peaks overhead over the next few hours. Wind magnitude will then ease through the evening as mixing depths shrink and the LLJ departs east. The gradient will remain in place through tonight as the low stalls over Lake Huron, supportive of gusts in the 25 to 35 mph range much of the night. Moisture will continue to wrap around the occluded system to produce pockets of light rain, drizzle, and light snow through this evening. Southern areas should trend dry overnight, but the Thumb and Tri-Cities have a 20 to 30% chance for additional light snow through Saturday morning. Any minor accumulations should be limited to grassy surfaces.

Complex upper air pattern tonight into Saturday with an amplified ridge over Ontario squeezed between troughing over New England and the northern Plains. As today's upper low shears out and departs into New England, the Great Lakes region is left within a relative col which allows inverted sfc-700mb troughing to be orphaned off overhead through the weekend. Cool, cyclonic flow persists across the state with widespread stratus remaining pervasive. Temperatures Saturday will be relatively mild with highs in the mid 30s to lower 40s, then Sunday will be a return to typical mid February with lower to mid 30s.

A series of shortwaves will dig from the northern Plains into the Tennessee Valley this weekend, dislodging the resident troughing while inducing localized height falls and cold advection across the state late Saturday night and Sunday. A lobe of the sfc trough is modeled to sink southward Sunday morning and bring a round of light snowfall to much of SE MI. Temperatures in the mid 20s to around 30 will allow for minor accumulations of around an inch before noon. Coverage of snow will decrease during the afternoon but additional lobes of vorticity aloft with offer the potential for more localized intervals of snow showers continuing into Sunday evening. Fresh cold advection behind the morning trough will result in steep low-level lapse rates and weak instability intersecting the DGZ, with models also indicating pockets of 900-800mb omega as well. So some locally heavier snow showers will be possible at times Sunday afternoon and evening, with quick localized accumulations of an additional inch where any occur.

Temperatures trend downward for Monday and Monday night within continued cool cyclonic flow, but chances for snow look slim as height rises commence. The middle of next week looks to be an active period with several windows for additional precip. The first occurs late Tuesday into Tuesday night when a quick hitting warm advection / isentropic ascent snow event is noted in the bulk of guidance. Ensemble members support a general 1 to 3 inch type of event with details to be gleaned in further forecast cycles. Another low pressure system is shown in the vicinity late Wednesday into Thursday with much higher model spread instilling low confidence on specifics, but additional precip and gusty winds will be possible.

MARINE

Ongoing Gale Warnings for Lake St Clair and western Lake Erie remain unchanged as southwest winds gust to 35-40 knots through the evening. An occluded front remains stationary near Sturgeon Point, steering the surface low into north-central Lake Huron by this evening. Arrival of the low relaxes the pressure gradient enough to to reduce wind speeds and gusts below headline thresholds. Poleward of the front, flow is ENE but will become more northerly with the arrival of the low which should also briefly reduce precipitation chances tonight. By Saturday morning, northwest flow inland and northeast flow over water sets up a convergence axis that utilizes the Lake Superior moisture connection to produce band of lake effect snow that stretches into north-central Lake Huron. As the low weakens and eventually departs into Ontario Sunday, this axis combines with an upper level disturbance to expand snow shower coverage south into the rest of the waterways. Lack of gust potential limits concerns for snow squalls, although intense bursts of snow within the band will still be possible. Winds increase again on Monday as the gradient tightens with a brief shift to high pressure early week.

PREV DISCUSSION

Issued at 1245 PM EST Fri Feb 20 2026

AVIATION...

Westerly gradient flow is in place across all of Southeast Michigan this afternoon with winds at many locations of 25 to 35 knots. Relatively moist conditions in the lowest 5.0 kft agl has limited mixing depths today and suspect that wind gusts in excess of 40 knots will become increasingly isolated. Boundary layer convergence due to horizontal convective rolls will support some -RASN this afternoon with surface temperatures in the middle 30s. Strong model signal for MVFR ceilings throughout most of the period.

For DTW...West wind of 25 to 35 knots with some small window yet for 40 knot gusts. Potential exists for -RASN this afternoon. No accumulation expected.

DTW THRESHOLD PROBABILITIES...

* High for ceiling aob 5000 feet today and tonight.

* High for ptype of melting snow this afternoon and evening.

DTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

MI...Wind Advisory until 9 PM EST this evening for MIZ060>062-068>070- 075-076-082-083.

Lake Huron...Small Craft Advisory until 7 PM EST this evening for LHZ421-441-443.

Lake St Clair...Gale Warning until 10 PM EST this evening for LCZ460.

Michigan waters of Lake Erie...Gale Warning until 10 PM EST this evening for LEZ444.


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