Your favorites:

Harris Lake, Wisconsin Weather Forecast Discussion

190
FXUS63 KGRB 040830
AFDGRB

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Green Bay WI 330 AM CDT Sat Oct 4 2025

Forecast discussion for routine morning forecast issuance

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Very warm again today with high temperatures in the 80s to near 90. Several record highs in jeopardy, including the potential for warmest on record for all of October at GRB.

- Conditions hazardous to small craft late this afternoon through early Monday morning.

- Gusty winds paired with very warm temperatures this weekend will result in increased fire weather potential.

- Rain chances return late Sunday across north-central WI, then impact all areas Sunday night through Monday night. The highest rain chances will occur Monday into Monday evening from central to east-central WI (40-50%).

&&

.DISCUSSION... Issued at 329 AM CDT Sat Oct 4 2025

Broad upper ridge centered over the eastern CONUS will hold through most of the weekend over the Great Lakes. Other than the isolated storms early today over far northeast WI, rain chances will not arrive until mainly Sunday night. In the meantime, we`ll be basking in record setting warmth over much of the area and increasingly breezy conditions which will lead to elevated wildfire potential. For those looking for fall, sharp cooldown is still in store early this week and we could see frost over northern WI by Tuesday night.

Temperatures...Persistence forecast should work with mostly sunny skies, deep mixing and similar 925-850mb temps to yesterday. See no reason why highs will not make a run at 90 degrees over portions of the Fox Valley and into parts of central WI. Mid to upper 80s elsewhere. If GRB reaches 89, it will set an all time October record as the 88 yesterday tied that mark. After a night where temps in the mid 60s will be what we should be seeing for highs this time of year, another warm day will occur on Sunday. Highs continue to trend up, though anything more than isolated records look unlikely. Once the front moves through, it is back to October with post-frontal temperatures dropping back into the 50s and 60s to start the work week, with highs potentially below average by midweek. As high pressure settles overhead Tuesday through Wednesday, min temps dropping into the lower to middle 30s will promote frost Tuesday night and Wednesday night for northern into far northeast WI.

Winds/Fire weather...Increasing pressure gradient and stronger winds aloft will be breezy to windy conditions this weekend. Gusts this afternoon should reach 20-30 mph, strongest over central and north-central WI. Even stronger winds occur on Sunday with many areas seeing gusts over 30 mph by the afternoon. Risk of seeing 40+ mph gusts is lower, but would be highest over central to north-central WI based on expected mixing into 40-50 kt low- level jet. The gusty winds, RH values as low as 30-35% in sandy soil regions of central to far northeast WI, combined with drying and curing fuels leads to increase fire weather concerns, especially as the expected winds would support the potential for power line fires. Per fire weather partners, fuels are not quite ready yet as even as leaves are turning, they are still mainly on the trees. Will continue to highlight in the HWO and through our messaging on social media.

Marine...On Lake Michigan, status quo for stronger southerly winds (as high as 20-25 kts with gusts 30-35 kts) and building waves (as high as 6-9 feet) leading to a high-end Small Craft Advisory starting late this afternoon and lasting into Monday morning. Only change was to extend end of Small Craft until 7 am on Monday. On the Bay of Green Bay, only marginal gusts 20-25 kts today near Washington Island, so no headline. Greater risk and greater coverage of 15-25 kts with gusts over 25-30 kts on Sunday, so we`ll eventually issue a Small Craft Advisory for the Bay, just not yet. Once winds shift northwest on Monday morning behind the cold front, they become significantly lighter.

Rain/Storm chances...Weak moisture advection and enough elevated instability was just enough to kick off storms over the Green Bay area late last evening. Remnants of these are shifting across Door County early this morning and will exit soon.

Dry the rest of today into tonight, then main change to the forecast was to introduce small pops for showers and some storms over north- central WI late on Sunday afternoon as tail of shortwave lifting north of Lake Superior interacts with low-level jet and increasing instability to develop isolated to scattered showers. Decent agreement from available CAMs and short range models, ensembles (eg. HREF) to support increase in pops. After this, cold front over the northern plains shifting east Sunday night into Monday continues to support chance to low-end likely pops in a fairly narrow band of showers and at least isolated thunder. Greatest risk of rain for central to north-central WI occurs Sunday night, with better chances for northeast, east- central WI late Sunday night through Monday. Still a signal that secondary wave rides along and north of front Monday night, but it also still looks like most of the forcing for the next round of showers (enhanced by right entrance of upper jet) will stay to the south over southern/southeast WI and into central Great Lakes. Total precipitation late Sunday through Monday mainly less than 0.25 inch. Probabilities of exceeding that amount have increased to 40 percent in parts of central WI, but risk of seeing over 0.50 inch remain low, topping out at less than 20% over central WI.

Dry weather then through Wednesday, before return flow brings chance for showers back to the region late next week. Model agreement not great, so pops stay in slight chance range for now.

&&

.AVIATION...for 06Z TAF Issuance Issued at 1145 PM CDT Fri Oct 3 2025

Showers and thunderstorms across east-central Wisconsin should exit the region around TAF time, mainly affecting KGRB. Some MVFR fog is possible at KGRB due to the recent rainfall; although, lower conditions will also be possible. Further north, MVFR/IFR fog is possible as indicated by METAR observations given low level moisture trapped in the lowest levels of the atmosphere.

Otherwise, VFR conditions are expected at the rest of the TAF sites and eventually all sites once any fog burns off Saturday morning.

SFC winds will be out of the southwest and will increase through the period as a low-pressure system over the Rockies tracks east and the surface pressure gradient tightens. Expect sustained speeds 6 kts or less overnight. South winds will gusty up to 20 kts Saturday morning. Some gusts to 25 kts are possible Saturday afternoon.

Marginal LLWS is possible overnight as southwesterly winds at 2000 ft increase to around 30 kts. LLWS is expected Saturday night with gusty south winds continuing Sunday, potentially reaching 30 kts.

&&

.GRB WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION.....JLA AVIATION.......Kurimski

NWS GRB Office Area Forecast Discussion

WeatherForYou.com, LLC is not responsible for any damages or problems caused by this service. Some weather information is powered by XWeather. WeatherForYou.com, NOAA, Xweather 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.