Lucas and Wood Counties
link
608
fxus61 kcle 172335
afdcle
area forecast discussion
national weather service cleveland oh
735 pm edt sun may 17 2026
.what has changed...
the slight risk (level 2 of 5) has been expanded east into northwest
ohio for late monday afternoon/evening. the slight risk (level 2
of 5) for tuesday has also been expanded further east into
northeast ohio and northwest pennsylvania.
&&
.key messages...
1) temperatures will be well above seasonal averages through early
this week. the warmest days will be monday and tuesday when highs
may approach daily records at a few sites. cooler temperatures
behind a cold front mid to late week.
2) localized strong to severe storms possible across northwest ohio
tomorrow. widespread showers and storms tuesday into early
wednesday, with severe storms possible tuesday afternoon and
evening.
&&
.discussion...
key message 1...
broad southwesterly to southerly flow will usher in much warmer and
more humid conditions for monday and tuesday. highs warm into the
upper 80s areawide on monday and mid 80s by tuesday. area dewpoints
will peak in the mid-60s each afternoon. we will remain warm
overnight in the upper 60s to lower 70s, providing little overnight
relief. temperatures through the first half of may have been below
average which will likely lead to this quick hit of heat to feel
noticeably warm. take steps to reduce time in the sun during the
warmest part of the day and remain hydrated.
a cold front will swing east across the region tuesday into
wednesday allowing for a reprieve from above normal temperatures.
cooler wednesday and thursday with highs in the 60s before highs
reach the 70s friday into next weekend.
key message 2...
we`ll begin the week mainly dry with some potential for showers
and thunderstorms across the west in the afternoon and evening
as an upper shortwave moves overhead. the storm prediction
center has upgraded a small portion of northwest ohio to a
slight risk (level 2 of 5) of severe thunderstorms with a
marginal risk (level 1 of 5) extending along a line from
marblehead to carey and points west. this severe threat is driven
by the potential for damaging winds and isolated large hail and
supported by a narrow corridor of moderate instability
(1000-1500 j/kg) given the warm and moist advection. expect for
any convection that moves into the region to decrease in
intensity as it pushes east into a less favorable environment
monday night.
more widespread showers and thunderstorms, some severe, will be
likely on tuesday as a cold front approaches from the northwest.
the entire forecast area is either under a slight or marginal
risk for severe weather with the delineation occurring along a
line from corry pa to mount gilead. areas west of this line are
under a slight risk (level 2 of 5) and areas east and south of
this line under a marginal risk (level 1 of 5). the primary
hazards will again be damaging winds and large hail given the
instability and stronger low/mid level flow.
&&
.aviation /00z monday through friday/...
vfr conditions are expected through the taf period with the
airspace on the warm west side of high pressure and the next
weather system slowly moving through the midwest. elevated
southwest winds with gusts of 20-25 kts will subside over the
next couple of hours along with any remaining cumulus from this
afternoon. a strong low level jet entering the region overnight
will present a brief llws window for the western terminals of
ktol and kfdy. for the daytime hours on monday, expecting mostly
clear conditions with elevated south to southwest winds
returning in the warm sector and gusts of 20 to 25 kts. toward
the end of the taf period, showers and potentially some storms
may approach ktol and kfdy but most of the impacts are probably
going to be after the taf period. some mid-level clouds will
start to enter the kcle area with the extra 6-hours in the taf.
outlook...non-vfr possible in showers and thunderstorms at
western terminals monday night. non-vfr likely at times in
showers/thunderstorms tuesday into wednesday. non-vfr possible
in showers on friday.
&&
.marine...
light and variable winds this afternoon will give way to south
winds around 10 knots tonight. offshore flow will deepen in the
western basin monday afternoon with wind speeds increasing to 15
to 20 knots during peak diurnal mixing. at this point, it
appears that winds should remain just below small craft advisory
criteria and the higher waves will be focused into the open
waters. southwest winds around 10 knots will continue monday
night, however winds will likely reach 15 to 20 knots (possibly
as high as 20 to 25 knots) in the western and central basin
tuesday afternoon. small craft advisories may be needed for
tuesday. winds will shift to the northwest behind a cold front
wednesday and expect onshore flow 10 to 15 knots to continue
through wednesday night before winds shift to the northeast by
thursday. winds/waves will remain below small craft advisory
limits later this week, although some choppiness is likely with
the onshore flow.
&&
.climate...
high temperatures on monday and tuesday will approach record
values. the following are the records for may 18 and 19 at local
climate sites.
date toledo mansfield cleveland akron youngstown erie
05-18 95(1962) 92(1962) 91(1962) 92(1962) 92(1962) 89(1889)
05-19 92(1996) 88(1964) 88(1998) 91(1911) 89(1934) 90(1996)
&&
.cle watches/warnings/advisories...
oh...none.
pa...none.
marine...none.
&&
$$
discussion...13
aviation...sefcovic
marine...15
Fulton and Henry Counties
link
313
fxus63 kiwx 172338
afdiwx
area forecast discussion
national weather service northern indiana
738 pm edt sun may 17 2026
.key messages...
- severe thunderstorms monday afternoon and evening. heavy rain,
damaging wind gusts, and hail are the the primary hazards.
- additional severe storms are anticipated on tuesday.
- remaining warm and humid through tuesday. cooler and dry by
wednesday with highs only in the 60s.
&&
.discussion...
issued at 211 pm edt sun may 17 2026
the primary severe weather concern tomorrow evolves around what is
expected to be an upstream, mature, mcs early monday morning.
mcs maintenance is dependent, in part, on mid-level lapse
rates, instability, and bulk shear. instability appears to be a
non- issue across northern il and even northwest in on either
side of sunrise monday, with mucape values of 1,000-1,500 j/kg.
lapse rates near 7c/km are also favorable, but shear magnitude
of only 25 knots immediately ahead of the line is marginal at
best, in contrast to increased shear values behind the line
(which could be a result of the model-derived convection). given
the aformentioned nuances, and upper-level forcing lifting
north of our area, an incoming mcs from illinois in the morning
will be in a weakening phase as it approaches northwest indiana
just after sunrise.
the associated outflow boundary from this mcs is likely the catalyst
for afternoon severe thunderstorms (best window of opportunity
appears to be 1p to 10p edt). forecast soundings ahead of the line
show bountiful sfc and mu cape in excess of 2,000 j/kg while bulk
shear values is marginal near 25 knots. steep low-level lapse rates
suggest damaging winds are the primary hazard, as does the
anticipated linear storm mode. a southwesterly low-level shear
vector indicates a low tornado probability for the northern edge of
any mcs that develops. cannot rule out hail from any discrete storms
that develop ahead of the line. a final plausible outcome for monday
is that the weakening mcs moves from west to east monday morning
through midday, resulting in abundant cloud cover and steady rain
for a time which ultimately squashes the severe weather risk. given
the preceding instability (as noted above) this seems unlikely.
similarly, severe weather appears increasingly likely on tuesday as
the slow-moving cold front ultimately responsible for this active
weather pattern moves through. instability continues to be ample
while 0-6km shear improves toward 35 knots. with the cold front in
play, tornadoes are possible as well. fine details remain to be
seen, but early indications suggest a line of thunderstorms develops
to our west and moves through tuesday afternoon and evening.
notably cooler starting wednesday with highs only in the 60s. high
pressure promotes dry weather through at least friday, perhaps into
saturday, depending on the timing of the next disturbance lifting in
from the southern plains.
&&
.aviation /00z tafs through 00z tuesday/...
issued at 734 pm edt sun may 17 2026
vfr conditions to dominate for the first 12 to 15 hours of the
period with the only concern being some marginal llws as the low
level flow begins to ramp up somewhat. attention then shifts to
what will likely be a weakening complex of storms moving out of
il around/after 15z. cams still indicating plenty of instability
ahead of this area to allow for the potential of re-
development/intensification of storms as they enter the area.
strongest storms may end up more towards kfwa, but have
continued with prob30 at ksbn and a few hours later at kfwa. the
area should be fairly progressive with clearing skies behind it.
&&
.iwx watches/warnings/advisories...
in...none.
oh...none.
mi...none.
marine...none.
&&
$$
discussion...brown
aviation...fisher
Monroe and Lenawee Counties
link
163
fxus63 kdtx 180345
afddtx
area forecast discussion
national weather service detroit/pontiac mi
1145 pm edt sun may 17 2026
.key messages...
- the risk for severe weather exists again monday and tuesday mainly
during the afternoon and evening. warm and windy conditions will
also prevail.
- cooler conditions can be expected wednesday and thursday.
&&
.aviation...
vfr conditions persist for the remainder of the night with only
scattered pockets of mid/high cloud. breezy southwesterly winds
develop by late morning with peak gusts between 25-30kts. a broken
line of remnant upper midwest convection is set to arrive over se mi
by afternoon, roughly 19-00z, offering the next thunderstorm
chances. given some lingering uncertainty in exact coverage of
storms, have maintained prob30 mention.
d21/dtw convection... no convection forecast this evening through
early monday afternoon. a broken line of showers and storms are then
possible between 20-00z.
.dtw threshold probabilities...
* low for thunderstorms this afternoon.
* low for ceilings aob 5000ft today.
&&
.prev discussion...
issued at 254 pm edt sun may 17 2026
discussion...
ongoing surface analysis and trends show an increasingly more
buoyant/unstable airmass advecting northward toward a quasi
stationary front extending across the southern saginaw valley and
thumb. this may provide a focus more more robust convective
development later this afternoon/evening. ascent will be aided by
broad mid level height falls associated with an mcv that will track
across nrn lower mi late this afternoon and evening. the latest rap
indicates surface based cape nearing 2k j/kg feeding into the
frontal boundary this evening. respectable bulk shear and low level
helicity values will favor supercells, with damaging winds, large
hail and an isolated tornado remaining the primary severe weather
hazards. convective chances will decrease farther south due to
weaker forcing.
subtle short wave ridging will build across lower mi overnight in
the wake of the mcs passing across nrn lower mi. this will suppress
convective development late tonight into mon morning. remnant
boundary layer moisture convergence along the frontal boundary
around the saginaw bay and thumb region may support some localized
fog. although strengthening low level wind fields overnight will
largely be elevated from the nocturnal boundary layer, model
solutions indicate enough boundary layer flow to drive the front
north of the forecast area by daybreak monday, placing the entire
forecast area in the warm sector. the light flow combined with
elevated sfc dewpoints will warrant relative mild nighttime lows in
the 60s.
diurnal mixing will result in warm and windy conditions on monday.
while temperatures look to make another run into the 80s, the
potential for late day convection supports leaning toward the lower
end of the model guidance spectrum (low to mid 80s for highs).
convection timing and coverage will depend heavily on the upscale
convective growth upstream tonight. there is reasonable agreement
among the 12z hi res suite that convectively induced short wave
features will traverse se mi monday afternoon/evening, coinciding
with peak diurnal destabilization. the forced ascent would also erode
the mid level capping inversion, resulting in scattered to possibly
numerous thunderstorms. weak to moderate instability with good cape
density will result in a chance for severe storms, with damaging
winds and large hail being the primary severe weather hazards.
severe chances will be the forecast concern again on tuesday
associated with a cold front forecast to pass across se mi late
afternoon/evening. this front will be associated with a more
amplified mid level wave forecast across the northern great lakes
region. deeply sheared profiles within moderate instability will
again support strong to severe convection. warm and windy conditions
will also prevail in the prefrontal environment. model soundings
indicate 30 to 35 knots in the mixed layer, which may result in wind
gusts approaching 40 mph outside of any convection. strong high
pressure will expand across the region in the wake of the front by
wednesday, resulting in cooler and dry conditions.
marine...
cold front has stalled over southern lake huron this afternoon, with
southerly winds to its south and northeast winds to its north. main
marine concern this afternoon-evening is potential for strong to
severe thunderstorm development along the front and/or lake breezes
that have pushed inland from saginaw bay, lake st. clair, and lake
erie. all modes of severe weather are in play. lingering
thunderstorms push north across lake huron tonight, although the
severe threat wanes after sunset. unsettled conditions continue for
the first half of the week as warm and breezy southerly flow
supplies plenty of instability to the great lakes. wind gusts for
the lake huron shoreline/lake st. clair approach 30 knots monday-
tuesday, although an isolated gale force gust over saginaw bay
tuesday cannot be entirely ruled out. small craft advisories are in
effect for monday and will be needed again tuesday. strong to severe
thunderstorm chances exist both afternoons as well. a strong cold
front tuesday night results in a pattern shift for mid-week,
bringing a quieter, more seasonable pattern to the great lakes.
&&
.dtx watches/warnings/advisories...
mi...none.
lake huron...small craft advisory from 10 am to 10 pm edt monday for lhz421-422-
441>443.
lake st clair...small craft advisory from 10 am to 10 pm edt monday for lcz460.
michigan waters of lake erie...none.
&&
$$
aviation.....kdk
discussion...sc
marine.......mv
you can obtain your latest national weather service forecasts online
at www.weather.gov/detroit.
The three regional National Weather Service offices that cover the Toledo area include Cleveland, Detroit/Pontiac, and Northern Indiana.