Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Dune Acres, IN
![]() | Sunrise 5:57 AM Sunset 7:34 PM Moonrise 8:47 AM Moonset 12:13 AM |
Marine Forecasts
NOTE: Zones updated 4/16/2026. Some zones changed. Use Edit if needed.
LMZ779 Expires:202604211530;;734622 Fzus63 Kmkx 210804 Glflm
open lake forecast for lake michigan national weather service milwaukee/sullivan wi 304 am cdt Tue apr 21 2026
for waters beyond five nautical miles of shore on lake michigan.
waves are provided as a range of significant wave heights, which is the average of the highest 1/3 of the wave, along with the average height of the highest 10% of the waves which will occasionally be encountered.
Synopsis -
high pressure around 30.4 inches over the mid atlantic and northeastern conus and low pressure around 29.7 inches developing in the plains will bring breezy southerly winds to lake michigan through this morning. Meanwhile, 29.5 inch low pressure tracks eastward across the hudson bay with a cold front extending south of it.
the aforementioned cold front will progress southward down the lake this afternoon and evening, with light northeasterly winds behind it. High pressure around 30.4 inches builds into ontario on Wednesday, bringing light and variable winds across the lake. Winds will then become southeast and increase Thursday into Friday, as strong low pressure around 29.2 inches develops in the northern plains.
lmz080-669-671-673-675-777-779-870-872-874-876-878-211530- lake michigan from michigan city in to st. Joseph mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from sheboygan to port washington wi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from port washington to north point light wi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from north point light to wind point wi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from wind point wi to winthrop harbor il 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from winthrop harbor to wilmette harbor il 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from wilmette harbor il to michigan city in 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from whitehall to pentwater mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from grand haven to whitehall mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from holland to grand haven mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from south haven to holland mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from st. Joseph to south haven mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- 304 am cdt Tue apr 21 2026
sheboygan wi to pentwater mi south - .
Today - South winds to 30 kt diminishing to 10 to 20 kt. Scattered rain showers this afternoon. Waves 4 to 7 ft occasionally to 9 ft subsiding to 3 to 5 ft.
Tonight - South winds 10 to 15 kt backing to north. Patchy fog overnight. Waves 2 to 4 ft subsiding to 1 to 3 ft.
Wednesday - Northeast winds 5 to 10 kt. Patchy fog. Waves 1 to 2 ft.
Wednesday night - Southeast winds 5 to 10 kt becoming south 10 to 15 kt. Waves 1 ft or less building to 1 to 3 ft.
Thursday - South winds 10 to 20 kt. Waves 2 to 4 ft building to 4 to 6 ft occasionally to 8 ft.
Thursday night - South winds 15 to 25 kt. Chance of showers. Waves 4 to 7 ft occasionally to 9 ft.
Friday - South winds 15 to 25 kt diminishing to 10 to 20 kt. Rain showers likely. Waves 4 to 7 ft occasionally to 9 ft.
Saturday - North winds 10 to 20 kt. Waves 3 to 5 ft.
open lake forecast for lake michigan national weather service milwaukee/sullivan wi 304 am cdt Tue apr 21 2026
for waters beyond five nautical miles of shore on lake michigan.
waves are provided as a range of significant wave heights, which is the average of the highest 1/3 of the wave, along with the average height of the highest 10% of the waves which will occasionally be encountered.
high pressure around 30.4 inches over the mid atlantic and northeastern conus and low pressure around 29.7 inches developing in the plains will bring breezy southerly winds to lake michigan through this morning. Meanwhile, 29.5 inch low pressure tracks eastward across the hudson bay with a cold front extending south of it.
the aforementioned cold front will progress southward down the lake this afternoon and evening, with light northeasterly winds behind it. High pressure around 30.4 inches builds into ontario on Wednesday, bringing light and variable winds across the lake. Winds will then become southeast and increase Thursday into Friday, as strong low pressure around 29.2 inches develops in the northern plains.
lmz080-669-671-673-675-777-779-870-872-874-876-878-211530- lake michigan from michigan city in to st. Joseph mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from sheboygan to port washington wi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from port washington to north point light wi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from north point light to wind point wi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from wind point wi to winthrop harbor il 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from winthrop harbor to wilmette harbor il 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from wilmette harbor il to michigan city in 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from whitehall to pentwater mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from grand haven to whitehall mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from holland to grand haven mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from south haven to holland mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- lake michigan from st. Joseph to south haven mi 5 nm offshore to mid lake- 304 am cdt Tue apr 21 2026
sheboygan wi to pentwater mi south - .
LMZ700
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7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Dune Acres, IN

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Area Discussion for Chicago, IL
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FXUS63 KLOT 211140 AFDLOT
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 640 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
KEY MESSAGES
- Threat for scattered thunderstorms this afternoon and evening.
Severe threat is low, but a few strong/gusty cores possible, particularly south of I-80 and east of I-55.
- Warming trend through Thursday (except cooler near Lake Michigan on Wednesday).
- More widespread showers and thunderstorms with another cold front Thursday night into Friday.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 218 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
Water vapor loops reveal a low-amplitude shortwave embedded within broad northwest flow, shifting steadily eastward into northwest Iowa and southwest Minnesota early this morning. Ahead of this feature, a southwesterly LLJ is near its nocturnal peak, but will remain robust as it drifts across parts of the region later this morning. Expectation is for surface gusts to increase quickly after sunrise as mixing into the base of this arriving speed max begins. Based on the progression and orientation of the strongest flow, there will likely be a notable north- south wind gust gradient across the area today, with the strongest occurring roughly east of I-55 and south of I-80. Given fairly deep mixing (at least to 850-800 mb), have boosted wind gusts towards the NBM 90th percentile (35+ mph), which aligns better with mean boundary layer flow near 30 knots during the afternoon. In addition, have dropped dewpoints across the southeast third of the forecast area, in-line with the deeper-mixing guidance as dewpoints mixed out pretty aggressively yesterday. With the overlap of stronger winds and afternoon RH values near 30 percent, parts of the area may approach an elevated grass fire danger as fine fuels have dried (Midewin RAWS site at 7% yesterday afternoon), and this part of the forecast area hasn't received nearly as much rain as farther north. Will highlight this in the fire weather planning forecast.
The other focus today is on what appears to be an increasing potential for thunderstorms this afternoon and into the evening.
The aforementioned shortwave will transport a renewed elevated mixed layer into the area later this morning and afternoon. The upper air sounding at North Platte, NE sampled the core of this EML plume as it advected off the high terrain, with surface-5 km lapse rates near dry adiabatic. As this plume of steep lapse rates arrives in our northwest through the morning, forecast guidance nearly ubiquitously shows increasing saturation taking place at the top of the EML near 600-500 mb along with the eventual initiation of very high-based convection rooted above 6-7 kft. Convection initially may remain fairly sparse, but it's now looking like at least widely scattered coverage is in the cards across parts of northeast Illinois and into northwest Indiana during the afternoon hours.
As this activity continues southeastward, there may be a potential for some stronger wind gusts as cores work into an area of deeper mixing. Overall, instability will not be that significant (likely a few hundred J/kg), but the dry sub-cloud layer may promote some strong gusts to the surface, particularly south of I-80 and east of about I-55. If cores manage to sustain and grow (which also is not entirely clear at this point), couldn't rule out the potential for a few 60+ mph gusts and perhaps some small hail. Additional convection may develop this evening as a southwesterly LLJ impinges upon some increased 925-850 mb moisture and overtops a remnant outflow boundary.
The orientation of the mid and upper level wind field (strong veering to the northwest with near-surface southerlies) can result in localized training issues. So while the multi-model CAM suite really doesn't show a strong signal for this now, will need to keep an eye on this in the vicinity of the IN/IL state line this evening.
A backdoor front/boundary will push into the region through late tonight. This will turn winds onshore at the lakefront tonight.
Can't rule out that areas of fog bleed in off the lake late tonight into Wednesday morning, but neutral to mixy modified Richardson number values increase uncertainty as to how far inland this threat will extend. For now, have confined fog wording to the first mile or two of the lakefront.
Onshore flow will persist through the day on Wednesday, and the combination of stratus and fog over the lake will likely hold high temperatures in the mid 50s lakeside while inland locales will warm into the 70s. This boundary looks like it'll stall somewhere in our southwest through the day, and with dewpoints forecast to rise to near 60 to its south, additional thunderstorm development will be possible through midday and afternoon hours Wednesday. Forcing appears very nebulous, and likely limited to general near-surface convergence, so made no alterations to the NBM-delivered slight chances in our far southeast at this time.
Warmer and breezy conditions will develop on Thursday, with lingering lake cooling likely confined to portions of Lake County (IL) and perhaps far northeastern Cook. The next synoptic trough will roll overhead through Thursday night delivering another round of more widespread showers and some thunderstorms into Friday morning. Limited instability, the climatologically unfavorable time of night, and overall weak flow suggests the severe threat should remain pretty low with this activity.
A cold front will send temperatures back to near-normal levels over the weekend. Another system will bring the next chances for showers and storms back to the area early next week.
Carlaw
AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/
Issued at 640 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
Key messages for the 12Z TAF period:
* A few hour period of showers and thunderstorms Tuesday afternoon in Chicagoland. Associated gustier winds and vsby reductions possible.
* A signal for dense fog/low stratus late Tuesday night into early Wednesday. Low confidence on exact impacts.
SSW winds are building early this morning and will see regular gusts between 20 and 25 kt for most of the daytime as they gradually veer to westerly.
A broken line of showers and possible thunderstorms is anticipated to develop over northern IL and drop south across the Chicago metro this afternoon. Periods of moderate rainfall with MVFR vsbys will be possible. Localized gusty winds to near or over 30 kt are also on the table. Favored window for ORD/DPA is 19-22Z, and 20-23Z at MDW/GYY. While not out of the question, precip looks to remain east of RFD this afternoon.
Winds will ease and veer to NW behind the showers, then onto NE by late Tuesday night, likely with some erratic behavior at times during the evening. Dense fog is favored to develop over southern Lake Michigan and protrude inland late Tuesday night into early Wednesday. Noteworthy uncertainty exists in exact impacts and how late into Wednesday those will linger. At least a period of MVFR cigs and vsbys is highly favored, although a strong signal exists for IFR to LIFR conditions after around 09Z, mainly around Chicago and Gary. With the uncertainties, maintained prevailing low MVFR for the late overnight through morning. A TEMPO for IFR was introduced at ORD, MDW, and GYY during this TAF cycle which corresponds to the most likely window of greatest impacts. Timing on a return to VFR is equally uncertain. Maintained MVFR through the morning period, but a signal exists for VFR by mid-morning.
Doom
LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
IL...None.
IN...None.
LM...Small Craft Advisory until 4 PM CDT this afternoon for Wilmette Harbor to Calumet Harbor IL.
Small Craft Advisory until 7 PM CDT this evening for the IN nearshore waters.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 640 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
KEY MESSAGES
- Threat for scattered thunderstorms this afternoon and evening.
Severe threat is low, but a few strong/gusty cores possible, particularly south of I-80 and east of I-55.
- Warming trend through Thursday (except cooler near Lake Michigan on Wednesday).
- More widespread showers and thunderstorms with another cold front Thursday night into Friday.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 218 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
Water vapor loops reveal a low-amplitude shortwave embedded within broad northwest flow, shifting steadily eastward into northwest Iowa and southwest Minnesota early this morning. Ahead of this feature, a southwesterly LLJ is near its nocturnal peak, but will remain robust as it drifts across parts of the region later this morning. Expectation is for surface gusts to increase quickly after sunrise as mixing into the base of this arriving speed max begins. Based on the progression and orientation of the strongest flow, there will likely be a notable north- south wind gust gradient across the area today, with the strongest occurring roughly east of I-55 and south of I-80. Given fairly deep mixing (at least to 850-800 mb), have boosted wind gusts towards the NBM 90th percentile (35+ mph), which aligns better with mean boundary layer flow near 30 knots during the afternoon. In addition, have dropped dewpoints across the southeast third of the forecast area, in-line with the deeper-mixing guidance as dewpoints mixed out pretty aggressively yesterday. With the overlap of stronger winds and afternoon RH values near 30 percent, parts of the area may approach an elevated grass fire danger as fine fuels have dried (Midewin RAWS site at 7% yesterday afternoon), and this part of the forecast area hasn't received nearly as much rain as farther north. Will highlight this in the fire weather planning forecast.
The other focus today is on what appears to be an increasing potential for thunderstorms this afternoon and into the evening.
The aforementioned shortwave will transport a renewed elevated mixed layer into the area later this morning and afternoon. The upper air sounding at North Platte, NE sampled the core of this EML plume as it advected off the high terrain, with surface-5 km lapse rates near dry adiabatic. As this plume of steep lapse rates arrives in our northwest through the morning, forecast guidance nearly ubiquitously shows increasing saturation taking place at the top of the EML near 600-500 mb along with the eventual initiation of very high-based convection rooted above 6-7 kft. Convection initially may remain fairly sparse, but it's now looking like at least widely scattered coverage is in the cards across parts of northeast Illinois and into northwest Indiana during the afternoon hours.
As this activity continues southeastward, there may be a potential for some stronger wind gusts as cores work into an area of deeper mixing. Overall, instability will not be that significant (likely a few hundred J/kg), but the dry sub-cloud layer may promote some strong gusts to the surface, particularly south of I-80 and east of about I-55. If cores manage to sustain and grow (which also is not entirely clear at this point), couldn't rule out the potential for a few 60+ mph gusts and perhaps some small hail. Additional convection may develop this evening as a southwesterly LLJ impinges upon some increased 925-850 mb moisture and overtops a remnant outflow boundary.
The orientation of the mid and upper level wind field (strong veering to the northwest with near-surface southerlies) can result in localized training issues. So while the multi-model CAM suite really doesn't show a strong signal for this now, will need to keep an eye on this in the vicinity of the IN/IL state line this evening.
A backdoor front/boundary will push into the region through late tonight. This will turn winds onshore at the lakefront tonight.
Can't rule out that areas of fog bleed in off the lake late tonight into Wednesday morning, but neutral to mixy modified Richardson number values increase uncertainty as to how far inland this threat will extend. For now, have confined fog wording to the first mile or two of the lakefront.
Onshore flow will persist through the day on Wednesday, and the combination of stratus and fog over the lake will likely hold high temperatures in the mid 50s lakeside while inland locales will warm into the 70s. This boundary looks like it'll stall somewhere in our southwest through the day, and with dewpoints forecast to rise to near 60 to its south, additional thunderstorm development will be possible through midday and afternoon hours Wednesday. Forcing appears very nebulous, and likely limited to general near-surface convergence, so made no alterations to the NBM-delivered slight chances in our far southeast at this time.
Warmer and breezy conditions will develop on Thursday, with lingering lake cooling likely confined to portions of Lake County (IL) and perhaps far northeastern Cook. The next synoptic trough will roll overhead through Thursday night delivering another round of more widespread showers and some thunderstorms into Friday morning. Limited instability, the climatologically unfavorable time of night, and overall weak flow suggests the severe threat should remain pretty low with this activity.
A cold front will send temperatures back to near-normal levels over the weekend. Another system will bring the next chances for showers and storms back to the area early next week.
Carlaw
AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/
Issued at 640 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
Key messages for the 12Z TAF period:
* A few hour period of showers and thunderstorms Tuesday afternoon in Chicagoland. Associated gustier winds and vsby reductions possible.
* A signal for dense fog/low stratus late Tuesday night into early Wednesday. Low confidence on exact impacts.
SSW winds are building early this morning and will see regular gusts between 20 and 25 kt for most of the daytime as they gradually veer to westerly.
A broken line of showers and possible thunderstorms is anticipated to develop over northern IL and drop south across the Chicago metro this afternoon. Periods of moderate rainfall with MVFR vsbys will be possible. Localized gusty winds to near or over 30 kt are also on the table. Favored window for ORD/DPA is 19-22Z, and 20-23Z at MDW/GYY. While not out of the question, precip looks to remain east of RFD this afternoon.
Winds will ease and veer to NW behind the showers, then onto NE by late Tuesday night, likely with some erratic behavior at times during the evening. Dense fog is favored to develop over southern Lake Michigan and protrude inland late Tuesday night into early Wednesday. Noteworthy uncertainty exists in exact impacts and how late into Wednesday those will linger. At least a period of MVFR cigs and vsbys is highly favored, although a strong signal exists for IFR to LIFR conditions after around 09Z, mainly around Chicago and Gary. With the uncertainties, maintained prevailing low MVFR for the late overnight through morning. A TEMPO for IFR was introduced at ORD, MDW, and GYY during this TAF cycle which corresponds to the most likely window of greatest impacts. Timing on a return to VFR is equally uncertain. Maintained MVFR through the morning period, but a signal exists for VFR by mid-morning.
Doom
LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
IL...None.
IN...None.
LM...Small Craft Advisory until 4 PM CDT this afternoon for Wilmette Harbor to Calumet Harbor IL.
Small Craft Advisory until 7 PM CDT this evening for the IN nearshore waters.
| Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air | Water | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
| BHRI3 - Burns Harbor, IN | 16 mi | 81 min | S 9.9G | 49°F | 30.05 | |||
| MCYI3 - Michigan City, IN | 18 mi | 31 min | S 19G | 49°F | 30.01 | 32°F | ||
| CHII2 - Chicago, IL | 20 mi | 31 min | S 19G | 52°F | 38°F | |||
| CMTI2 - 9087044 - Calumet, IL | 20 mi | 43 min | S 9.9G | 30.00 | ||||
| CNII2 | 22 mi | 46 min | SSW 8.9G | 51°F | 35°F | |||
| 45026 - St. Joseph, MI | 32 mi | 41 min | S 16G | 50°F | 2 ft | 30.06 | 37°F | |
| 45186 | 47 mi | 31 min | 12G | 51°F | 47°F | 2 ft | 29.98 | |
| WHRI2 - Waukegan Harbor, IL | 47 mi | 121 min | S 8 |
Wind History for Calumet Harbor, IL
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Airport Reports
Link to 1 hour of 5 minute data for KGYY
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KGYY
Wind History Graph: GYY
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of great lakes
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