Latest Duluth Area Text Forecast Discussion product from NWS:

888
FXUS63 KDLH 281145
AFDDLH

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Duluth MN
545 AM CST Wed Jan 28 2026

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Below normal temperatures continue into the weekend before
  warming back to near normal levels for Sunday into next week.

- Periodic light lake effect snow for the South Shore for the
  next several days. Little to no snow chances for the remainder
  of the Northland until a Clipper system brings light snow for
  Sunday into Sunday night.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 216 AM CST Wed Jan 28 2026

Today - Friday Night:

We remain colder than normal through Friday night, albeit less
cold than our recent arctic cold spell. High temperatures will
be in the single digits above and below zero today and Thursday
and single digits above zero to near 10F on Friday. Overnight
lows will be in the single digits to teens for this morning and
again each night/morning through Saturday morning. Some spots in
northern Minnesota may even dip into the low 20s below zero
Thursday night/Friday morning. Wind gusts generally remain
under 20 mph for most locations this morning/today and even
lighter for Thursday through Friday night. This combination of
winds and cold are still expected to push minimum wind chills
each night/morning through Friday morning into the teens to 20s
below zero. Can`t rule out a few pockets of -30F to -35F in
northeast Minnesota this morning and Friday morning, but
widespread wind chills of colder than -30F are not expected, so
have held off on issuing any Cold Weather Advisories at this
time. If temperatures/wind chills drop farther than currently
forecast, some targeted Cold Weather Advisories may be needed
for a few counties.

Snow chances remain low to nil through the remainder of the
week, with some very light snow/flurries (10-20% chance)
tonight into daytime Thursday associated with weak shortwave
energy interacting with some low-level saturation within a few
thousand feet of the ground. Expect no accumulations to a light
dusting at best. A retrograding upper-level low over James Bay
this morning will then dive southwest through the Northland late
Thursday and Friday, but will have very limited moisture to work
with (PWATs only ~0.10 inches). Can`t rule out some light
snow/flurries as this system passes through as model soundings
show most of the limited moisture being in the dendritic growth
zone on Friday, but little to no snow accumulations are
expected. Probabilities for measurable snow (>=0.1") are only
about 10% or less. Outside of these very low-end snow chances,
the only accumulating snow potential in the Northland through
the end of the work week will be periodic light lake effect
snow showers for the South Shore in northwest to northerly
winds. Given ice build up along the South Shore and a dry
airmass, snow rates with any lake effect will be light. Total
forecast accumulations range from 1-3" between now and Friday
night, most of which is associated with slightly higher moisture
availability as the tonight-Thursday shortwave moves through.
Even then, hourly snow rates will remain very light, peaking at
~0.1-0.2" per hour.

This Weekend - Next Week:

The center of strong surface high pressure slides south out of
Manitoba and through the eastern Dakotas/western Minnesota
daytime Friday through much of Saturday, keeping appreciable
snow chances at bay through Saturday. The high pressure moves
off to our south Saturday night, allowing a weak Alberta
Clipper to move through Sunday and Sunday night. Chances for
measurable snow have increased with this system (40-70%), but
again generally limited amounts of moisture should keep snowfall
accumulations on the lighter side. NBM probabilities of 1" or
more of snow for that timeframe have trended slightly upwards,
but are still only 20-40%, with probabilities of 2" or more of
snow remaining less than 20%. Another Clipper system with
additional light snow is possible middle of next week as we
remain in a general northwest flow pattern aloft.

High temperatures trend closer to normal in the teens to near
20F above zero on Saturday, and then settle into a period of
near to slightly above normal high and low temperatures for
Sunday into next week. Widespread highs in the 20s and lows in
the single digits above zero are forecast for Sunday into early
next week, warming even a couple more degrees by mid-next week.

&&

.AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z THURSDAY/...
Issued at 545 AM CST Wed Jan 28 2026

BKN to OVC stratus continues to expand southward across the
Northland this morning. Most sites are seeing VFR ceilings in
the stratus, but there have been some periodic scattered cloud
bases around 1500-2500 ft on the southern edge of the stratus.
Also can`t rule out a few flurries with the clouds this morning,
but surface impacts are nil with no accumulations. There remains
a better potential for MVFR ceilings developing briefly this
afternoon, but expect the MVFR ceilings to scatter out for most
terminals this evening. There is still a 40% chance that MVFR
ceilings hang around at HYR through this evening and tonight.
INL has the highest chance for MVFR ceilings to remain this
evening and tonight (70% chance), as well as some intermittent
light snow/flurry chances late in the period late tonight, which
is currently highlighted by a PROB30 group.

&&

.MARINE /FOR NEARSHORE WATERS OF WESTERN LAKE SUPERIOR/...
Issued at 537 AM CST Wed Jan 28 2026

Winds along the North Shore have weakened below 20 kt and are no
longer expected to pose a hazard to small craft. The Small Craft
Advisory ends at 6 AM CST.

Previous Discussion: Northwesterly winds will continue to gust
to 20 to 25 kts along portions of the North Shore from Taconite
Harbor to Grand Portage until early this morning, before
weakening below 20 kt prior to sunrise. A Small Craft Advisory
is in effect. Winds will slowly become northerly late today into
tonight, remaining generally 20 kts or less. The exception will
be a brief period of 20-25 kt and waves of 3-5 ft for the Outer
Apostle Islands from late this afternoon through evening, and a
Small Craft Advisory has been issued to cover this threat.
Northeast to north winds on Thursday and Friday remain at or
under 20 kts, then turn southwesterly on Saturday and remain
light.

For the open water discussion, refer to the NWS Marquette Area
Forecast Discussion at weather.gov/mqt.

&&

.DLH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MN...None.
WI...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM CST early this morning for
     LSZ140-141.
     Small Craft Advisory from 4 PM this afternoon to midnight CST
     tonight for LSZ150.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Rothstein
AVIATION...Rothstein
MARINE...Rothstein

NWS DLH Office Area Forecast Discussion