471 FXUS63 KBIS 120717 AFDBISArea Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Bismarck ND 217 AM CDT Sun Oct 12 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Strong west to northwest winds Sunday through Sunday night.
- Rain expected across much of northwest North Dakota Sunday morning through Sunday evening. The rain could mix with or change over to snow late Sunday afternoon and evening. The probability of accumulating snow is low.
- Cooler for the first half of next week, with highs in the 40s and 50s and lows in the 20s and 30s. Medium chances for rain return mid to late week.
&&
.UPDATE... Issued at 215 AM CDT Sun Oct 12 2025
Quick update for a time extension to the Wind Advisory for northwest and north central North Dakota, now in effect until midnight CDT. Model guidance has been consistently pinpointing the evening as the most likely time period for strongest winds in this part of the state. More details to come in the upcoming full forecast discussion.
UPDATE Issued at 143 AM CDT Sun Oct 12 2025
The main area of showers has most exited the forecast area, but still lingers in the southern James River Valley and Turtle Mountains region. Within the past hour, some new convective activity has developed from around Glen Ullin to McClusky. No lightning has been observed with this activity at the time of this writing, and SPC mesoanalysis indicates only around 300 J/kg MUCAPE with poor mid level lapse rates where these showers are located.
UPDATE Issued at 1010 PM CDT Sat Oct 11 2025
Quick update for pops, using a blend of latest short term guidance. No changes to current Wind Advisory. Updated text products will be transmitted shortly.
UPDATE Issued at 852 PM CDT Sat Oct 11 2025
Updated pops with a blend of latest short term guidance. Widespread light rain is currently lifting through far south central ND. Over the next few hours, highest precipitation chances will lift from the far south central into the James River Valley. A few lightning strikes were noted on the southern edge of the precip in north central/northeast South Dakota. Low probability of the lightning making it into the southern James River Valley.
UPDATE Issued at 546 PM CDT Sat Oct 11 2025
Only some minor changes for sky cover needed late this afternoon. There were a couple of lightning strikes over eastern ND a while ago. Better chances for showers will move into the area from the south later this evening and overnight. Low to medium chances will remain over much of central ND, with medium to high chance in the James River Valley and into eastern ND.
&&
.DISCUSSION... Issued at 251 PM CDT Sat Oct 11 2025
This afternoon, southwest flow aloft was present across the Dakotas, downstream of a trough and closed low moving onshore in the Pacific Northwest. At the surface, a north-south oriented warm front was analyzed with a surface trough in eastern Montana. A tight surface pressure gradient ahead of the front was producing strong southeasterly winds, with gusts around 40 mph observed throughout the day at a few different locations. Chances for rain the rest of the afternoon are limited mainly to eastern North Dakota, with radar activity upstream in South Dakota associated with low-level warm air advection.
Tonight, a leading shortwave is forecast to move into southern North Dakota in the mid-evening, with rain chances increasing around sunset. As this tracks north and interacts with another surge of low- level warm air advection, CAMs produce a modest area of rain across the central and east through the night, with a few isolated showers possible across the west. We could see a thunderstorm or two during this period, with the northwest the main area of potential in forecast UH tracks, although even this looks like a low probability outcome with limited instability available.
The Pacific NW shortwave trough ejects over the Rockies and into the Dakotas early Monday morning, leading to cyclogenesis in southeast Montana with an attendant cold front developing. As the previous shift noted, ensemble members are coming into better agreement on this being a more progressive and open wave compared to a couple of days ago when a more compact closed low was favored. As the vort max aloft interacts with the nose of an upper jet, a swath of rain will move from Montana into western North Dakota Sunday morning. When the upper low wraps up and pushes northeast, precipitation chances become more limited to primarily northwest North DAkota, with dry slotting behind the cold front across the majority of the forecast area during the day. There could be some diurnal, isolated showers associated with the cyclonic flow, which some high-res models are picking up on, but the likelihood of more than a tenth of an inch of rain is low for southwest and central North Dakota. Even with a moderate period of rain expected through the day across northwest North Dakota, QPF amounts have decreased in recent guidance, with Divide County the main area with any potential of exceeding an inch of liquid precipitation.
The chance for measurable snow in the northwest is holding around 20 to 30 percent, with slightly higher probabilities in Divide County, and the potential to exceed an inch of accumulation is less than 20 percent. The sped up timing of the front and thus the colder air does raise some questions about available daylight and impacts to any potential accumulations. The 12Z HREF highlights a general tenth to quarter inch an hour snowfall rates which would likely not be enough to overcome the warm ground temperatures, especially since it switches precipitation from rain to snow in the late afternoon with still a couple hours before sunset.
The GEFS and ECMWF ensemble members are finally starting to reach consensus on the center of the surface low being placed in southeast Manitoba around 18 UTC Sunday, with the cold front extending through eastern North Dakota by this point. Because of this, much of western and central North Dakota will see the daily high temperature earlier in the day, with temperatures falling behind the front.
The most widespread impact with this system will be the strong west to northwest winds behind the front. There is still some question of the upper threshold of winds, with some varying levels of wind speeds at the top of the mixed layer in forecast soundings, but there was enough confidence to go ahead with a Wind Advisory for virtually all of western and central North Dakota. Can`t fully rule out some counties potentially needing an upgrade, but will probably have to start seeing even stronger winds in upstream observations to have confidence for that. The initial cold front will bring a push of strong winds as it moves east, from a combination of cold air advection, pressure rises, and steep low-level lapse rates. Deterministic guidance is also starting to show a secondary push of cold air advection and enhanced pressure rises as the low deepens, which correlates with indications of the strongest winds occurring in the late afternoon across northern North Dakota. The general expectation is for sustained winds of 30 to 35 mph with gusts up to 50 mph.
As the upper low progresses off to the northeast, precipitation chances taper off relatively quickly Sunday night, with winds staying a bit breezy with a surface pressure gradient still in place. Colder air will continue filtering into the region, and sub- freezing temperatures are likely across the west and north central. Monday will be brisk in the post-frontal air mass, with highs in the lower 40s to lower 50s, although decreasing winds and increasing sunshine will help counteract the chilly temperatures. Overnight lows will again be near to below freezing across the forecast area, in the mid 20s north to mid 30s south.
By Wednesday evening, cluster analysis is in relative agreement on the trough base extending into the southwest CONUS, with downstream southwest flow across the Dakotas, favoring an active pattern. From here, however, ensemble members diverge, with around a 50/50 split between a more progressive trough vs a slower, quasi split flow pattern for the end of the work week. Both of these would bring precipitation chances to the area from a broad closed low moving through the region, but would lead to some differences depending on the speed and depth of the system. The one consistency between the two scenarios is that temperatures stay warm enough to eliminate p- type issues, with only rain expected. Current blended probabilities have a low chance of exceeding an inch of rain over 48 hours during this system, but there are a few ensemble members producing higher amounts.
A longwave troughing pattern is strongly favored to continue into the weekend, keeping low chances for precipitation in the forecast. NBM temperature percentiles indicate a slight cooling trend from Thursday through the weekend, although current spreads would keep temperatures around average for mid October.
&&
.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z MONDAY/... Issued at 143 AM CDT Sun Oct 12 2025
PRECIPITATION: Steadier rain was moving into eastern North Dakota at the start of the forecast period, but a few trailing showers have redeveloped from around KMOT to KBIS. These isolated to scattered showers, moving northeast, may continue through the rest of the night. There is also a low chance that one of these showers could strengthen into a thunderstorm. This activity is unlikely to impact either KMOT or KBIS.
More persistent rain will move into northwest North Dakota by early Sunday morning. A few thunderstorms could accompany the rain through mid morning, but the probability of TS at KXWA is too low to mention in the TAF. The rain will continue through the afternoon before lifting into Canada Sunday evening. Before the rain ends, it could mix with or change over to snow, but this is more likely to occur north of KXWA.
CEILINGS: For the overnight period, MVFR ceilings are primarily expected to be limited to portions of central North Dakota. MVFR ceilings are then expected across most of the state Sunday morning, lifting in the south central and southeast by mid afternoon and the southwest by evening, but holding on across much of the north into Sunday night.
WIND: South-southeast winds around 10-15 kts are expected overnight, with some higher gusts across south central and eastern North Dakota. Low level wind shear is also expected at KJMS and surrounding areas until early Sunday morning. A cold front will quickly move across the state from west to east Sunday morning into the early afternoon, turning winds to the west/northwest. Winds behind the front will be strong, with sustained speeds around 25-30 kts and gusts as high as 40-45 kts.
&&
.BIS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Wind Advisory from 7 AM this morning to midnight CDT tonight for NDZ001>005-009>013-021>023-025. Wind Advisory from 7 AM CDT /6 AM MDT/ this morning to 8 PM CDT /7 PM MDT/ this evening for NDZ017>020-031>037-040>047-050.
&&
$$
UPDATE...Hollan DISCUSSION...Jones AVIATION...Hollan
NWS BIS Office Area Forecast Discussion