textproduct: Milwaukee/Sullivan
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 High Swim Risk is in effect for Lake Michigan beaches in Racine and Kenosha counties this afternoon and evening, with a Moderate Risk for Milwaukee county. Keep out of the water and away from dangerous areas like piers and breakwalls!
- Chances for thunderstorms late Tuesday night through Wednesday evening.
- Below normal temps continue.
UPDATE
Issued 700 AM CDT Mon Jun 22 2026
Powerful sunshine will continue to rapidly erode the existing river valley and low-lying area fog early this morning. Afterwards, should have mostly-clear skies through much of today.
Departing low pressure is expected to produce some breezy north to northeast winds over the southern half of Lake Michigan today, which would allow waves to build to the 3 to 5 ft mark for Racine and Kenosha county beaches this afternoon and evening. Hence, a High Swim Risk is in effect. Northerly exposed beaches will be at the greatest risk, particularly those along and just north of Wind Point in Racine county.
Sheppard
SHORT TERM
Issued 1055 PM CDT Sun Jun 21 2026
Today and Tonight:
A low pressure system in northeastern MO/central IL will continue to move east toward the Mid Atlantic coast tonight. The stratiform rain shield across the southern Great Lakes region will continue to gradually shift east with the low bringing an end to our rain tonight. Rain is already starting to end from west to east yet tonight. Majority of the rain is expected to end with in the next couple of hours. Some isolate light rain could linger on the back side in the early morning hours, but by and large all the rain will end prior to sunrise Monday. As this low pressure system exits high pressure will be building in from the Northern Plains. Skies will gradually begin to clear as the stable air builds in and winds will become light. Lake shore areas are expected to have the strongest winds of the day coming off of lake Michigan which will keep temperatures cooler in the low to mid 60s. Inland areas will be a bit warmer around the mid 70s. Scattered cumulus clouds are expected Monday afternoon well inland from the lake. Dry conditions are expected to remain through Monday night.
Patterson
LONG TERM
Issued 1055 PM CDT Sun Jun 21 2026
Tuesday through Saturday:
An upper level trough will be descending down from southern Alberta through the northern Plain and into the northern Great Lakes Region late Tuesday. The sfc low will follow a very similar path and is expected to cross through northern Wisconsin Wednesday. POPs are expected to increase across the region from the northwest to the southeast as this sfc low moves in. Instability should rise across the state as a warm front moves through. This will bring not only rain chances but also thunderstorms. The question becomes how much instability and shear for any stronger to severe storms. From some forecast soundings there looks to be narrow CAPE and shear around 30 kts or more. So there is a chance for storms, but each sounding that has both of these features has a cap to contend with as well. So its looking like this could be another conditional strong to severe storms scenario as of now. This is still a couple of days out so things could change, but a time period worth keeping an eye on.
For Thursday and Friday, there is some discrepancies around 500mb among guidance. Some build in ridging aloft faster than others. High pressure is expected to move into the Great Lakes Region briefly but timing and whether or not there could be some lingering PVA aloft is still in question. The PVA aloft with high pressure near the sfc has some low chance POPs (10-30%) mixing in for both Thursday and Friday at times. Available moisture and any forcing at the sfc will really be the catalyst for any light rain during this time (a lake breeze could be just enough forcing, convergence at the sfc, to get light rain). Hard to tell if this will even be an issue if the upper level ridge is in place aloft.
Next decent chance for rain looks to come Sunday into Monday as a trough moves through the western CONUS toward the Great Lakes Region. With there already being discrepancies in the 500mb flow prior to this, models are just continuing to diverge from each other further. Granted timing and strength seem to be the biggest problems so POPs are still hitting a peak of 40-60% Monday.
Patterson
AVIATION
Issued 700 AM CDT Mon Jun 22 2026
River valley and low-lying area fog will continue to rapidly burn off early this morning, leaving VFR and dry weather today through the daytime hours of Tuesday. Some FEW/SCT diurnal cumulus clouds will be possible today at around 5,000 ft. There will be chances for fog to redevelop in these same susceptible areas (WI River Valley and other low- lying marshy areas) late Tonight into early Tuesday morning, particularly west of Madison. Leaving that out of the TAFs for now due to low confidence.
A light north to northeast breeze expected today, a few gusts upwards of 20 KT possible for terminals along the Lake MI shoreline this afternoon. Light and variable winds tonight into Tuesday, with a localized easterly lake-breeze along the Lake MI shoreline Tuesday afternoon.
Sheppard
MARINE
Issued 1055 PM CDT Sun Jun 21 2026
Low pressure around 29.7 inches will track eastward from northeastern Missouri to Ohio by Monday. Light easterly winds will persist across much of the lake with breezy northeast winds across the southern third tonight through Monday. As the low departs and high pressure moves in the pressure gradient will tighten just enough to build waves across the southern Wisconsin nearshore. Waves are expected to be around 4 feet at time Monday afternoon. A Small Craft Advisory is in effect for the elevated waves for areas south of Lighter northerly winds are expected late Monday evening into Tuesday as high pressure around 30.1 inches builds into the region. Winds will become light and variable Tuesday night as the high pressure tracks overhead. By Wednesday, the high pressure will exit to the southeast and low pressure around 29.8 inches moves from the northern Plains into northern Wisconsin. As the low approaches breezy south to southeast winds will develop across the lake.
Patterson
MKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
WI...Beach Hazards Statement...WIZ071-WIZ072...1 PM Monday to 9 PM Monday.
LM...Small Craft Advisory...LMZ645-LMZ646...1 PM Monday to 9 PM Monday.
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