
Deciphering The Evening Weather Report
Meteorologists throw around strange terminology during peak severe storm season. Where to begin? "Hook echoes?" On radar, spinning, tornadic storms often look like hooks, or the number "6". "Radar-indicated" tornado? Doppler detects swirling winds capable of spinning up a tornado. A warning with a "confirmed tornado" is even more dangerous. Summer warm fronts often strengthen at night, sparking expansive, nearly statewide swarms of strong to severe storms, with torrential rain and vivid lightning. These "meso-convective systems" (MCS) squeeze out 1-6" rains.
If the sun stays out for a few hours this afternoon many of us will sample the first 90 of the summer season, less than a week after experiencing the first 70 of spring! After a chilling April, Mother Nature is throwing our seasons into fast-forward.
A partly sunny, comfortable Fishing Opener is likely: 70s in the metro with 60s and a stray shower up north. We've seen worse.
No extended heatwaves in sight, just rapid changes and frequent showers.

Praedictix Briefing: this is an excerpt of a briefing issued Wednesday morning:

Thursday: Enhanced Severe Risk. As we watch a system quickly form across the Dakotas during the afternoon and evening hours on Thursday, we will see the threat of severe weather once again across the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest in association with a warm front lifting north across the Upper Mississippi Valley and a cold front moving eastward. For Thursday and Thursday Night, the greatest risk (an Enhanced Risk) exists from the eastern Dakotas and much of Minnesota southward into western Iowa and eastern Nebraska. This includes the Twin Cities, Sioux Falls, Fargo, Grand Forks, and Sioux City. Cities in the surrounding Slight Risk includes Duluth, Des Moines, and Omaha.

Forecast Radar. Storms on Thursday are expected to develop in the mid/late afternoon hours, initially stretching from the central and eastern Dakotas into northern Kansas. The environment will be ripe for these storms to quickly go severe, with very large hail and damaging winds expected along with a few tornadoes across the eastern Dakotas into western Minnesota. As we head into the evening, storms will form more into a line, with damaging winds become the primary threat (but still with a tornado and hail threat).