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Riverview Colony School Montana Weather Forecast Discussion

700
FXUS65 KTFX 141517
AFDTFX

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Great Falls MT 917 AM MDT Tue Oct 14 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- General cool, damp, and mostly cloudy conditions continue today with a few areas of passing light rain, snow, and or mixed precipitation expected.

- Another Pacific weather system will bring periods of rain showers and mountain snow Wednesday through early Friday, especially over southwest MT.

- Periods of breezy to windy conditions and mild temperatures are expected heading into the weekend.

&&

.UPDATE... Morning update is out. Only change this morning was to increase pops for the band of light snow / freezing drizzle moving northward through Southwest MT into Central MT this morning. Precip is light, with most areas getting less than 1/2 inch of snowfall...and just a minor light glaze of icing. With the cloud cover, still another cool day today across the CWA, with below normal temperatures. Brusda

&&

.DISCUSSION... /Issued 541 AM MDT Tue Oct 14 2025/

- Meteorological Overview:

The combination of mild and moist southwesterly flow overrunning cold low level east to northeasterly flow has resulted in abundant patchy fog, scattered areas of light snow, and even some drizzle/freezing drizzle. This general pattern will continue over the next couple of days, but gradually warming temperatures are expected to limit the impacts from snow and freezing precipitation. There may even be a few thunderstorms and or bursts of heavier snow showers over the southwest this afternoon and evening.

The elongated mid-level trough, responsible for the southwesterly flow aloft, stretches southwestward into central CA where a closed circulation will begin to swing northeastward through the Great Basin and eventually into eastern MT by Thursday evening. Most ensembles highlight this system merging with another trough diving southeastward through BC/AB Thursday night into Friday. This will bring the best chance for widespread lower elevation rain and mountain snow Wednesday through early Friday. With milder Pacific air moving in, snow impacts look to be on the minor side and mostly confined to mountain areas. Most of the precipitation is expected to fall east of a Dillon to Havre line and the primary area of concern will be snow in the Madison and Gallatin mountain ranges.

The Canadian trough merging on the back side of this system will bring strong northwesterly flow aloft and breezy to windy conditions Thursday night through Saturday before a brief period of ridging for drier and milder conditions move in this weekend. Another trough looks to move in late Sunday into early next week, but the precise evolution of this system is uncertain at this time. - RCG

- Forecast Confidence & Scenarios:

Rain and snow Wednesday through early Friday...

The current path of the trough responsible for the rain and snow expected Wednesday through Friday favors the most widespread precipitation to fall mostly east of a Dillon to Havre line. These areas currently have a 30 to 60% chance for rainfall/liquid equivalent precipitation amounts exceeding a half inch for the 48 hour period ending Friday at 6 am, of course with mountain areas boasting the greatest probabilities. Some deterministic models, namely the NAM, have been bringing heavier precipitation and lower elevation snowfall totals farther north into Central MT, but with mid- and upper level temperatures running on the warm side, generally around 0C at 700 mb, those solutions seem a bit unrealistic. Snowfall probabilistic guidance also reflects the warmer temperatures with only the Madison and Gallatin ranges above 6,000 ft seeing a 50 to 70% chance for snow totals over 3 inches for the same 48 hour period ending at 6 am Friday. There is also some uncertainty to sort out in regards of second trough diving southeastward out of Canada being more influential and shifting the precipitation even farther east than current projections. This situation will be monitored in the coming days. - RCG

&&

.AVIATION... 14/12Z TAF Period

Passing disturbances within a southwesterly flow aloft will maintain scattered areas of rain, snow, and some mixed precipitation for much of the TAF period. There will also be a few thunderstorms in the southwest this afternoon. Expect periods of widespread MVFR/IFR/LIFR conditions and mountain obscuration due to low stratus, patchy fog, and or rain/snow. - RCG

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... GTF 39 29 46 34 / 20 20 30 40 CTB 39 23 49 29 / 20 20 10 20 HLN 42 29 45 33 / 80 40 50 50 BZN 48 30 48 31 / 40 60 60 70 WYS 52 28 46 27 / 60 80 90 80 DLN 47 32 48 32 / 80 50 60 60 HVR 46 30 50 35 / 20 20 40 50 LWT 46 29 47 33 / 20 40 50 70

&&

.TFX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

&&

$$ http://www.weather.gov/greatfalls

NWS TFX Office Area Forecast Discussion

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