Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Great Falls, MT

Home |  Current Version |  Previous Version |  Text Only |  Print | Product List |  Glossary On
Versions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
562
FXUS65 KTFX 031149
AFDTFX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Great Falls MT
549 AM MDT Mon Jun 3 2024

.Aviation Section Updated...

.SYNOPSIS...

A cold front will move through the area today bringing a chance
for showers and isolated thunderstorms across the entire region.
Behind the front, strong westerly winds will develop towards the
evening and continue through Wednesday morning. Above normal
temperatures and drier conditions return for later in the week.

&&

.DISCUSSION...

General Forecast Main Points:

- General thunderstorm risk across Montana today. Locally high
  wind gusts will be the main threat.

- Above normal temperatures will continue with the warmest
  temperatures expected later in the week towards the weekend.

- Generally dry conditions for the region starting Tuesday except
  for some scattered showers in southwestern Montana towards the
  end of the week.


High Wind Event Main Points:

- Winds will start picking up this afternoon along the Rocky
  Mountain Front and become widespread overnight.

- Wind gusts up to 75 mph along the Rocky Mountain Front.

- Wind gusts up to 65 mph across the remainder of north-central
  and central Montana.

- Widespread wind gusts of 40 to 55 mph possible across southwest
  Montana.

- High crosswind risk Monday evening through Wednesday morning.


Detailed Expected Impacts: The main concern will be travel
hazards related to the high winds especially for light and/or
high-profile vehicles and any vehicle towing a trailer. The risk
to I-15, US-2, US-87, and MT-200 will be of particularly high
concern through this event.

The secondary threat will be tree damage and flying debris from
loose or unsecured objects which may damage property and/or cause
isolated power outages. There is an ongoing concern that trees
that have been weakened by past storms, including the most recent
snow events in the last couple months, may be more susceptible to
falling under the stress of another round of high winds.


Short-Term Forecast: A Pacific cold front will move across the
region today bringing a widespread chance for showers with some
isolated thunderstorms possible. The greatest risk for
thunderstorms will be across southwestern Montana with gusty,
erratic winds being the main threat. Along the higher elevations
of the Rocky Mountain Front precipitation will start off as rain
and transition to snow later in the evening. Up to 2 inches of new
snow is possible at the highest elevations but currently no major
snow-related impacts are expected at pass level.

Behind the cold front westerly flow aloft will set up over north-
central and central Montana which will work to start increasing
wind speeds Monday night into early Tuesday morning. A second push
of wind will occur Tuesday afternoon into the evening which will
be when locations along the northern plains and hi-line are
expected to reach their highest wind gusts. When comparing this
setup to climatology, this event is still showing up as 3 to 4
standard deviations above normal in the ensembles. Thus,
confidence remains high in the expected severity of this event.


Warning/Watch Updates: With this forecast update, the remainder of
Fergus county was added to the high wind warning that starts this
evening. The rest of central Montana was added to the high wind
watch including the Little Belts, the Highwoods, and the rest of
Meagher county including White Sulphur Springs.

The tricky question for future updates will be what to do with the
areas currently under a high wind watch. Probabilities for wind
gusts exceeding 55 mph have continued to increase, but not to the
level or with the same level of confidence as locations further
north. Another consideration was the fact that in all the zones
under a watch there is reasonably high confidence that isolated
portions may reach high wind criteria but will it be widespread
enough to warrant putting the whole zone in a warning. Simply put,
there is enough confidence and threat potential that a watch is
warranted. But confidence at this point in time remains just
below what would ideally justify upgrading that area to a warning.
This scenario can reasonably go either way and it should be
anticipated by folks living in central Montana that their area
could be upgraded to a warning in the next update.

Otherwise, come Wednesday afternoon, winds will slowly start to
diminish with some lingering strong gusts up to 45 mph possible
along the Rocky Mountain Front, the hi-line east of Havre, and
higher elevations of north-central and central Montana through
late Wednesday night into early Thursday morning. As the trough
gets pushed out of the region by the emergence of an upper level
ridge, things will continue to calm down while warming up through
the rest of the week.


Thursday through Next Monday... By late this week, an upper level
ridge will build over the western CONUS bringing well above
normal temperatures across the state through the weekend. Exactly
how warm it will get remains uncertain at this time as there is
still some model disagreement on both the strength and the axis
of the ridge. There is also some disagreement on the mechanisms of
the ridge either breaking down or departing the region,
especially heading into next week. All of this means that, for
now, it will be quite warm and generally dry over the weekend but
beyond that uncertainty is too high for specifics.

-thor


&&

.AVIATION...

03/12Z TAF Period

VFR conditions will prevail through the first few hours of the
period with some low-VFR/MVFR possible for KHVR, KLWT, KBZN through
03/17Z. After 03/17Z, there will be a brief lull in the
precipitation before a cold front moves across the region this
afternoon bringing showers and isolated thunderstorms. The greatest
chance for thunderstorms will be along southwestern Montana
impacting KBZN, KEKS, and KWYS with temporary periods of MVFR/IFR
conditions possible. Behind the cold front, strong west winds will
set up and continue through the rest of the TAF period wind gusts up
55 kts for KCTB and up to 40 kts for KGTF, KHVR, KLWT, KHLN.
Mountain wave turbulence will become increasingly widespread Monday
afternoon and increase through Monday night.

-thor

Refer to weather.gov/zlc for more detailed regional aviation weather
and hazard information.

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
GTF  68  43  68  49 /  60  10   0   0
CTB  63  41  62  45 /  30  20   0  10
HLN  68  43  69  52 /  90  20   0  10
BZN  68  36  68  48 / 100  70   0  10
WYS  54  35  61  41 / 100  90   0   0
DLN  65  38  68  48 /  90  20   0   0
HVR  73  45  72  48 /  70  50   0   0
LWT  68  38  66  46 /  90  60   0   0

&&

.TFX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
High Wind Warning from 6 PM this evening to noon MDT Wednesday
for Bears Paw Mountains and Southern Blaine-Cascade County below
5000ft-East Glacier Park Region-Eastern Glacier, Western Toole,
and Central Pondera-Fergus County below 4500ft-Judith Basin
County and Judith Gap-Northern High Plains-Snowy and Judith
Mountains-Southern High Plains-Southern Rocky Mountain Front-
Upper Blackfoot and MacDonald Pass.

High Wind Watch from Tuesday morning through Wednesday morning
for Big Belt, Bridger and Castle Mountains-Gates of the
Mountains-Helena Valley-Little Belt and Highwood Mountains-
Meagher County Valleys.

High Wind Warning from 9 AM Tuesday to noon MDT Wednesday for
Eastern Pondera and Eastern Teton-Eastern Toole and Liberty-Hill
County-Northern Blaine County-Western and Central Chouteau
County.

&&

$$

http://www.weather.gov/greatfalls