305
FXUS63 KGRR 101110
AFDGRR
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Grand Rapids MI
710 AM EDT Tue Mar 10 2026
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Severe weather potential this evening and tonight
- Freezing rain tonight into Wednesday over Central Lower MI
- Accumulating snow Thursday night/Friday over Central Lower MI
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 358 AM EDT Tue Mar 10 2026
- Severe weather potential this evening and tonight
A stationary front is slowly sagging southward early this morning
from Central Lower Michigan towards I-96. The southward
progression of the front will continue today. A mid level
shortwave will be working across the plains this evening, which
will induce weak cyclogenesis at the surface. The low will be
situated in Southeast Iowa at 00z with a developing/strengthening
warm front stretching eastward across Northern Illinois to along
the Michigan/Indiana line. The placement of the warm front will be
critical to the mode of severe weather this evening and
overnight. The SPC HREF, which is a trusted severe weather
ensemble, has the warm front further north laying along the I-94
corridor. A low level jet will strengthen this evening to 40-50
knots which will set the stage for impressive low level wind
shear. Corroborating the HREF is the HRRR which for several runs
now is showing the warm front into the I-94 corridor as well with
40 knots of 0-1km shear and 60-70 knots of deep layer 0-6km shear.
Given the shear in place rotating storms are certainly expected.
The placement of the warm front will be pivotal in determining
the tornado threat this evening/tonight but beyond that the
rotating updrafts will likely produce a hail threat over a larger
area including both the I-94 and I-96 corridors. The wind threat
will likely be closer to I-94 as points north will be deeper
behind the warm front into the cool air meaning more elevated
storms.
In terms of the evolution we expect storms to initiate off to the
west over Northern Illinois and Southern Wisconsin after 4pm
expanding in area as they work east. It is after 8pm and
especially 9pm when our threat increases. 9pm to 3am will be the
likely window for severe potential tonight. Again, elevated
hailers are the most likely severe mode. Both damaging winds and
tornadoes cannot be ruled out down towards I-94. We will be
watching the warm front location very closely as any storms that
roll up from the south and interacts with it will have tornado
potential.
Both the HREF helicity swaths and Nadocast tornado probabilities
indicate the biggest tornado threat being south of our area
(although its close) across Northern Illinois and Northern
Indiana. Probabilities and helicity swaths are painted into our
southern couple rows of counties too, just not to the intensity
of those further south. Again, some of the parameters from hand
picked soundings across our south via the HRRR indicate a very
clear signal for tornado potential. The pivotal factor will be
how storms evolve and whether the front noses up into the I-94
corridor like the HREF and HRRR indicate.
- Freezing rain tonight into Wednesday over Central Lower MI
We have issued a Winter Weather Advisory for Lake, Osceola and
Clare counties for tonight into Wednesday. It is certainly spring
in the midwest with a dynamic system in play when we have winter
weather across Central Lower Michigan and severe storm potential
across the south. It is testament to the strength of the warm
front. Low level cold air will be pulled into the U.S. 10 corridor
setting the stage for a period of freezing rain overnight and into
Wednesday morning. The surface temperatures are marginal (around
32F) so the extent of the icing will likely not be significant.
It doesn`t take much icing at all though to create problems. There
is some indication that the freezing rain could also affect Mason,
Newaygo, Mecosta and Isabella counties but given the near to
slightly above freezing air temperatures decided to issue for only
the most confident counties.
- Accumulating snow Thursday night/Friday over Central Lower MI
The clipper that has been in the models now for days remains in
the models tonight with a trend towards a deeper low. That trend
has been going on for several days. The low will likely track just
to the north of Central Lower, which will place the heaviest snow
up across Northern Lower Michigan. That said, we are looking at
several inches of snow with advisory/plowable snow possible. We
will get by the storms and the ice first and then look deeper into
this system for potential headlines.
&&
.AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 709 AM EDT Tue Mar 10 2026
Active weather is expected during this TAF period with low
ceilings (IFR and potentially lower) much of the time frame.
Ceilings will lift some this afternoon but overall poor aviation
conditions are expected as we will be located near and north of a
warm front. Light rain showers, mist and fog are expected today.
Showers and thunderstorms are expected tonight. Some of the storms
may be severe tonight between 01z and 08z. AZO, BTL and JXN stand
the best chance at severe weather. Large hail would be the main
threat tonight from storms.
&&
.HYDROLOGY...
Issued at 358 AM EDT Tue Mar 10 2026
The antecedent conditions are that we have wet soils in place
which will aid in at lease some increase in runoff and elevated
river levels from recent rain. We are looking at a rain event from
this evening into Wednesday. Expected rainfall from the Weather
Prediction Center is for around an inch of rain across Southern
Lower Michigan including the Grand and Kalamazoo River basins.
Operational models are showing higher swaths than that with the
NAM indicating a band of 2+ inches of rain.
The meteorological setup is a typical heavy rain producer for us
with a strong low level jet on the order of 40-50 knots impinging
on a warm front draped across the area. Precipitable water values
through the event are forecast to be around 1.3 inches which is
above the daily max for the day (1.1 inches) per the SPC sounding
climatology page. Given the antecedent conditions and the
forecast rainfall a Hydrologic Outlook (ESFGRR) was issued from
the I-96 corridor to the south yesterday to convey the chance for
short term flooding/ponding of water and the potential for river
flooding.
Given the forecast rainfall amounts around an inch we are
expecting many sites to reach action stage/bankfull. Some
locations may reach Minor Flood Stage, even with rainfall totals
of around an inch. If the rain overperforms, which there is
potential for, we will see an increase in the number of river
forecast points going to Minor Flood Stage. We will be monitoring
rainfall amounts closely via radar products and ground truth
reports. If the rainfall trends towards 1.5 to 2.0 inches those
are the values that will add more river flooding potential. Areas
to the south and east of Grand Rapids are the locations most
likely to see flooding from this event.
&&
.GRR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MI...Winter Weather Advisory from 10 PM this evening to 2 PM EDT
Wednesday for MIZ038>040.
MARINE...None.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...Duke
AVIATION...Duke
HYDROLOGY...Duke
NWS GRR Office Area Forecast Discussion