The storms Saturday evening will move away with details in the
forecast become fuzzy into early next week as successive convective
events compound uncertainty and model consensus diverges. It does
look like a
mesoscale convective system (
MCS) develops somewhere
upstream of Iowa Saturday night and may move across some portion of
the state late Saturday night into Sunday morning. After any storms
with the
MCS move out Sunday morning, it looks like we could stay
capped through much of the day with warm and windy conditions, but
this will depend on where the
MCS tracks and any boundaries or
convective debris left behind. Storms may develop in the
LLJ over
Iowa Sunday night, but a higher risk of severe storms and locally
heavy
rainfall may develop Monday afternoon and evening as low
pressure and stronger forcing moves over Iowa. However, the
ECMWF
and CMC are slower than the
GFS and this is also shown in the
ensemble 500mb data as well. This could have storm potential linger
into Tuesday. After the boundary does push through the state,
whether Monday night or sometime Tuesday, cooler and drier air will
move into the state along with less stormy conditions.