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2026-04-14 EVENT: IA, IL, WI, MO, KS, OK, TX

Joined
Jul 16, 2025
Messages
43
Location
Madison, WI
For the upper Midwest on Tuesday, there's a lot of potential but also a lot of questions. Models have been unusually inconsistent about where and when things might happen. However, they've consistently shown plenty of storm ingredients, and storms initiating somewhere, so that's got me watching the day carefully.

Models forecast a moist airmass in place with lots of CAPE (models are often showing 3,000-4000+ J/kg across a significant area) and significant mid-level lapse rates. There's a healthy 500mb jet, with strong low-level winds often producing enlarged hodographs.

Models put a dryline in the ballpark of west Iowa, with a warm front/occluded front east of that. Both would be places to watch for storm initiation, and some model runs include warm-sector storms.

However, models have varied markedly on where they put these ingredients, and whether they put storms within those places (before dark). Other potential downsides include there being clouds earlier in the day and weak low-level lapse rates, as well as enough moisture throughout all altitudes to have me thinking about high-precipitation storms (though I admit I don't know how much moisture triggers that).

My overall take is that Tuesday has a high ceiling, but with a lot of question marks. Still, though we don't yet have a good sense of the details, there's enough there that I'm currently optimistic that at least somewhere will get some very interesting weather.

I also note fast storm movements are often shown in the simulated soundings, on the order of 40-50 mph. This looks like a good day for chasers to be extra cautious: From the outlook now, I could picture a high-precipitation supercell moving at 50mph with a strong tornado hidden by rain.
 
There sure is a lot of unanswered questions for tomorrow, Tuesday. I see the outlook has been upgraded, and the ingredients appear to be favorable for a severe day in and around the Chicago area. With that being said, don’t really see too much agreement in the models as of yet. I think a lot is going to have to do with what happens today north of us, and if the Chicago metro area becomes involved in any of today’s action. Personally I think it is going to be mainly a large hail and destructive wind type of scenario, but gonna hold off on making a go or no go decision until later today or very early tomorrow morning.
 
I haven't looked at Tues 4/13 since this morning, but as of then multiple models showed the difference between the surface/850 mb and 300/500 mb level much improved (from a chasing point of view that is) near the dryline in NW TX into OK. The last few days (Sat 4/11, Sun 4/12, and what Mon 4/13 has looked like so far) the flow has been non-optimal over the southern plains dryline target. This sloshing dryline got a lot of people excited, but I kept seeing flow issues, and I could not hop on the band wagon. We will see what Tuesday am brings, but right now I think I will head out.
 
Kinda thinking I will be out somewhere between Rockford and the northern lake county area after around 2 pm. Still have questions but it does look more possible for severe than earlier.
 
Models now are at least starting to look more similar to each other, even if they disagree how far east/west things will be. Possibility of undercutting cold air is a lot more present, though.
It’s looking like a bulge/in-cutting of the dryline somewhere in IA/WI/IL territory might be a focal point of good conditions and storm initiation.
 
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