We are adjusting the forecast drier this morning. The simple synopsis is that we have minor threat of rain over far northern Indiana tomorrow morning and midday, nothing farther south. Then, the front for early next week has fizzled to basically nothing, and the front for the 6th is gone. We may not see our first good look at rain potential until we get closer to the 9th and 10th. Let’s break it down.
High pressure is in over the state today. Temperatures will be cooler than last weekend and the start to this week to be sure, but we still are mostly above normal statewide today. We do have a minor upper level disturbance and secondary front that sweeps through tomorrow. This system brings a few spits and sprinkles worth a few hundredths to .1” over far northern Indiana, mostly north of US 30. The better focus of precipitation will be east in NW OH and then in SE MI as well. That skew means in Indiana, slightly better threats may be seen tomorrow morning in NE parts of the state. But, let’s not get cute: there is not any significant moisture to work with here. And…areas from US 30 southward are day all day tomorrow.
The weekend is dry, and now we see basically no moisture for early next week. The front will still work through, but the air mass it arrives into is so dry, there is not enough moisture to force through and make it a rain maker for us. For semantics, we will leave a few hundredths to a tenth in spots, but honestly, this front is a non-issue for us now. IT will swing winds around, but that is basically it. It will be a dry frontal passage. Without that front, the rest of the week is dry. The front we had been watching for the 6th was minor and fickle to start with, but now looks to meet the same demise of prior fronts, and likely does not even really make it through.
With all that said, we do still see potential of rain around the 9th into the 10th with a strong front moving in from the west and north. The initial good rains may lift northeast with the low into Canada, very similar to what happened with moisture on yesterday’s frontal passage. But, we see a secondary surge of moisture right now for late the 9th into the 10th that may be able to bring .25”-1” still to the area. We will be exceptionally dry by then…so this front has to be a strong one with good moisture flow into it back to the west in order to make something happen here.
Temps through the next 2 weeks will be normal to some above normal. This pattern fits exceptionally well for harvest into early October, and we think we should be able to make good progress there.
A better front develops early next week late Monday night into early Tuesday. This front is the one we have been mentioning for the Oct 3-4 period going back in our forecasts almost 10 days or more. It is coming just a little quicker, but still has potential for .25”-.6” rain totals over about 80% of the state. It moves through fast: by midday Tuesday, it is already gone to the east. The front moves quick enough and the air/ground will be dry enough from our previous pattern that the moisture likely soaks in quickly and will lead to very few actual delays behind the front. The rest of the 10 day period is dry through the end of Thursday. The map above shows a snapshot of the potential set up next Tuesday morning.
Our next front arrives on Wednesday. As we have mentioned previously, this front will have looked much more impressive over the western corn belt from late Monday through Tuesday, but will be running out of gas as if finally arrives Wednesday. This front will have rained itself out for the most part off to the west. Here we are looking for clouds and just a minor threat of rains, perhaps with totals of a few hundredths to a tenth or two over about 50% of the state. This should not be significant enough to promote major harvest delays. The biggest change we see with the front is a big cool down behind it. Temperatures will drop substantially back to normal levels at least, and there is a threat of slightly below normal temps. This will yield a drop of 20 degrees or more from Tuesday highs to Thursday and Friday highs. Again…these will be normal temps for late September…but a stark contrast to what we are going through right now. The last part of the week will be dry, as will the weekend. The map above shows cumulative rain potential now through October 1.