"Drought conditions expanded considerably across the Midwest, northern Delta and central Plains, with dry conditions now being noted in north-central Kansas, eastern Oklahoma, much of Arkansas, southern Missouri, southern Illinois, western Kentucky, Iowa, Minnesota, and eastern North Dakota," says MDA EarthSat Weather senior ag meteorologist Don Keeney.
The good news is the chances of rain over the Memorial Day weekend are greater than they were just a couple of days ago. Though it will offer a brief reprieve from the drought in some of the hardest-hit areas, the trend won't last long, Keeney says.
"Rainfall through early next week should help alleviate drought conditions a bit in the northern Plains, especially in Minnesota and northern Iowa," he says. "However, dryness should expand a bit further across the central Plains, southern Midwest and Delta. The rains will likely not be sufficient to end concerns and more follow-up rains will be needed."
In some spots, the shift to near-drought conditions has happened fairly quickly. Just earlier this month, Ian and Val Plagge were hoping for a drydown, as their farm was inundated by steady rains that kept their planting pace at a crawl.
"It is amazing how things can seem way too wet, then all the moisture is just shut off," Val said Wednesday. "It has been over 2 1/2 weeks since we've gotten rain now. Hopefully we get some this weekend."