848  
FXUS63 KFGF 072032  
AFDFGF  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GRAND FORKS ND  
232 PM CST SUN DEC 7 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- ON MONDAY, A WEAK SYSTEM WILL PRODUCE A TRACE TO 2 INCHES OF  
SNOW ACROSS PORTIONS OF NORTHEASTERN NORTH DAKOTA INTO  
NORTHWESTERN MN.  
 
- A STRONGER STORM SYSTEM ARRIVES ON TUESDAY, BRINGING A WIDE  
RANGE OF POTENTIAL WINTER IMPACTS FROM ACCUMULATING SNOW AND  
MIXED PRECIPITATION TO HIGH WINDS.  
 
- MUCH COLDER TEMPERATURES WILL ARRIVE LATE WEEK, WITH A 60%  
CHANCE THAT WIND CHILLS DROP TO -30F OR COLDER.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 232 PM CST SUN DEC 7 2025  
   
..SYNOPSIS  
 
NORTHWEST FLOW REMAINS IN PLACE OVER THE NORTHERN PLAINS. WITH COLD  
AIR ENTRENCHED TO THE NORTHEAST AND MILDER PACIFIC AIR TO OUR WEST,  
WE WILL REMAIN STUCK ON A WAVERING BAROCLINIC ZONE FOR MUCH OF  
THE WEEK. THIS WILL LEAD TO AN EXTREMELY ACTIVE PATTERN, WITH 3  
WAVES PASSING THROUGH IN THE NEXT 48 HOURS ALONE. ENSEMBLES HAVE  
ADVERTISED FOR DAYS THAT THE TUESDAY SHORTWAVE WILL BE THE  
STRONGEST IN THIS PARADE OF CLIPPERS, BRINGING THE POTENTIAL FOR  
HEAVY SNOW AND MUCH STRONGER WINDS THEN ANY OF THE OTHER WAVES.  
THEREFORE, WE EXPECT THE HIGHEST WINTER IMPACTS TO BE TIED TO  
THE TUESDAY SYSTEM. BEYOND TUESDAY ENSEMBLES HINT AT ANOTHER  
WAVE ON THURSDAY, FOLLOWED BY A POWERFUL PUNCH OF ARCTIC AIR.  
THIS WILL RESULT IN TEMPERATURES DROPPING INTO THE DOUBLE DIGITS  
BELOW ZERO AREA WIDE, BRINGING WHAT COULD BE THE FIRST COLD  
WEATHER HEADLINES OF THE YEAR.  
   
..LIGHT SNOW ON MONDAY  
 
A MID LEVEL SHORTWAVE LOCATED JUST WEST OF OUR FA HAS RESULTED IN A  
BAND OF SNOW OVER CENTRAL ND THIS AFTERNOON. AS WE GO INTO THE  
EVENING AND OVERNIGHT HOURS, IT WILL CONTINUE TO PROPAGATE  
EASTWARD, BRINGING LIGHT SNOW TO MUCH OF THE FA. ON THIS  
SHORTWAVES HEELS IS YET ANOTHER CURRENTLY TO OUR NORTH IN  
CANADA. THIS WAVE WILL OVERSPREAD THE FA IN A BROAD WARM AIR  
ADVECTION REGIME, WHICH WILL PROMOTE YET ANOTHER AREA OF LIGHT  
SNOWFALL ON MONDAY, MAINLY IN NORTHEASTERN ND INTO NORTHWESTERN  
MN. WHEN LOOKING AT THE 25TH TO 75TH PERCENTILES, SNOWFALL WILL  
RANGE FROM A TRACE TO 2 INCHES GENERALLY ALONG AND NORTH OF  
HIGHWAY 2, HIGHEST NEAR THE LAKE OF THE WOODS.  
   
..STRONG TUESDAY SYSTEM  
 
A STRONG AREA OF LOW PRESSURE WILL FORM IN THE LEE OF THE CANADIAN  
ROCKIES MONDAY NIGHT. WITH A OVER 100 KNOT JET STREAK, THIS LOW WILL  
RAPIDLY DEEPEN AND DIG TO THE SOUTHEAST, TRACKING THROUGH THE FA  
TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT. ENSEMBLES HAVE BEEN LATCHED ONTO  
ITS GENERAL TRACK FOR SEVERAL DAYS NOW. HOWEVER, THAT DOES NOT  
MEAN THIS IS A STRAIGHTFORWARD FORECAST.  
 
FIRST, A PERIOD OF STRONG WARM AIR ADVECTION WILL OVERSPREAD THE FA  
MONDAY NIGHT INTO TUESDAY. THIS WILL CAUSE SEVERAL FORECAST  
CHALLENGES. 1) A WARM NOSE ALOFT WILL COMPLICATE PRECIPITATION TYPE,  
ESPECIALLY ALONG AND SOUTH OF HIGHWAY 200. THIS WILL LIKELY LEAD TO  
A PERIOD OF FREEZING RAIN TUESDAY MORNING, ESPECIALLY BEFORE  
SUNRISE. ENSEMBLE PROBABILITIES FOR FREEZING RAIN NOW SHOW A STRIPE  
FROM SOUTH OF DEVILS LAKE THROUGH FARGO DOWN TOWARDS FERGUS FALLS.  
TIMING WISE IT MAY IMPACT THE TUESDAY MORNING COMMUTE, BUT AS  
TEMPERATURES WARM THROUGH LATE MORNING INTO THE AFTERNOON,  
IMPACTS FROM FREEZING RAIN WILL RAPIDLY DECREASE. 2) THE DUAL  
COMBINATION OF WARM TEMPERATURES AND RAIN/FREEZING RAIN WILL  
CRUST OVER THE EXISTING SNOWPACK IN SOUTHEASTERN ND/WEST  
CENTRAL MN. THIS WRENCH IN THE FORECAST INTRODUCES SIGNIFICANT  
UNCERTAINTY ABOUT HOW MUCH BLOWABLE SNOW AT LEAST IN THE  
SOUTHERN FA THERE WILL BE ONCE WINDS INCREASE BEHIND THE COLD  
FRONT TUESDAY EVENING.  
 
TO THE NORTH OF THE LOW, STRONG SYNOPTIC FORCING AND A BAND OF  
FRONTOGENSIS LOOK TO SET UP AN ARC OF ACCUMULATING SNOWFALL.  
ENSEMBLES HAVE BEEN CONSISTENT IN OUTPUTTING A STRIPE OF QPF AROUND  
0.5", RUNNING FROM SOMEWHERE IN THE DEVILS LAKE BASIN SOUTHEASTWARD  
INTO MN. THE HANDFUL OF CAMS THAT ARE NOW IN RANGE SHOW  
SLIGHTLY HIGHER QPF TOTALS THEN THIS, WHICH MAKES SENSE SINCE  
THEY SHOULD BE RESOLVING THE MESOSCALE FORCING BETTER THEN THEIR  
GLOBAL COUNTERPARTS. ASSUMING A LOWER SNOW TO LIQUID RATIO  
BASED ON WARMER SOUNDING PROFILES AND LESS RESIDENCE TIME IN THE  
DGZ, SNOWFALL TOTAL OUTPUTS ARE A BROAD 3 PLUS INCHES, WITH A  
STRIPE OF 6 INCHES. WHERE EXACTLY IN THE WATCH AREA THIS  
HEAVIEST BAND SETS UP STILL REMAINS UNCERTAIN.  
 
A FINAL COMPLICATING FACTOR IS THE WIND. AS THE LOW PROPAGATES  
EAST AND THE COLD FRONT PASSES, WINDS WILL INCREASE DRAMATICALLY  
TUESDAY EVENING. WINDS WILL BE STRONGEST ACROSS SOUTHEASTERN  
ND. HOWEVER, THIS IS THE AREA THAT WILL HAVE A CRUSTED OVER  
SNOWPACK AND RECEIVE THE LEAST NEW SNOW. FURTHER NORTH IN THE  
CENTRAL AND NORTHERN RED RIVER VALLEY, THERE WILL BE NEW  
SNOWPACK SUFFICIENT TO BLOW AROUND, BUT WINDS WILL NOT BE QUITE  
AS STRONG, AS THE CORE OF THE COLD AIR ADVECTION DIVES TOO FAR  
TO THE SOUTH. WINDS WILL TURN DUE NORTHERLY ON TUESDAY NIGHT,  
WHICH AT LEAST IN THE VALLEY SHOULD AID IN KEEPING THEM  
ELEVATED. IN TURN, PREDICTABILITY OF VISIBILITY REDUCTIONS TIED  
TO BLOWING SNOW IS LOW AT THIS TIME, AS FOR EVERY FACTOR THAT  
WOULD AID IN MORE SEVERE VISIBILITY REDUCTIONS, THERE IS ANOTHER  
FACTOR THAT DETRACTS.  
 
THEREFORE, WE HAVE ISSUED A WINTER STORM WATCH FOR MUCH OF THE FA  
FROM TUESDAY MORNING THROUGH EARLY WEDNESDAY MORNING. IT IS A  
LITTLE BROAD, AND THE TYPE OF IMPACTS AT EACH INDIVIDUAL POINT  
(ICE VS SNOW VS BLOWING SNOW) REMAIN A BIT IN QUESTION, BUT THIS  
IS AT LEAST A STARTING POINT IN SHOWING WHAT AREAS HAVE THE  
HIGHEST PROBABILITY OF SEEING WINTER IMPACTS. THE HANDFUL OF  
COUNTIES IN THE FAR SOUTH WITHOUT A HEADLINE IN EFFECT WILL BE  
REVISITED ON FUTURE SHIFTS AS PREDICTABILITY INCREASES, AS  
UNCERTAINTY RIGHT NOW LIES IN IF HEADLINES WILL NEED TO BE  
GEARED TOWARDS WINTER OR WIND IMPACTS, AND THE DEGREE OF  
SEVERITY (ADVISORY VS WARNING) FOR EACH.  
   
..LATE WEEK COLD  
 
THE COLDEST AIR OF THE SEASON WILL SPILL DOWN FROM CANADA TO END THE  
WORK WEEK. NBM IS ALREADY SHOWING THE PROBABILITY FOR WIND CHILLS OF  
-30F OR LOWER (COLD WEATHER ADVISORY CRITERIA) AT 60%. UNCERTAINTY  
AROUND WHERE THE DEEPEST NEW SNOWPACK WILL RESIDE, CLOUD COVER AND  
WINDS WILL EVENTUALLY DETERMINE HOW COLD BOTH TEMPERATURES AND WIND  
CHILLS ARE ABLE TO FALL.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1132 AM CST SUN DEC 7 2025  
 
TWO WEAK SYSTEMS WILL PASS THROUGH DURING THE TAF PERIOD, EACH  
BRINGING LIGHT SNOW. THE FIRST IS CURRENTLY OVER CENTRAL ND,  
PUSHING EASTWARD. IT WILL ARRIVE AT KDVL LATE THIS AFTERNOON,  
THEN PASS THROUGH THE RED RIVER VALLEY DURING THE EVENING HOURS.  
THERE WILL BE A LITTLE BREAK, BEFORE ANOTHER SYSTEM PASSES  
THROUGH ON MONDAY, MOSTLY IMPACTING NORTHERN TERMINALS. CEILINGS  
WILL VARY FROM VFR TO START THE TAF PERIOD, FALLING TO MVFR  
OVERNIGHT. MVFR WILL LIKELY PERSIST INTO MONDAY, BUT IT WILL BE  
A CLOSE CALL AS CEILINGS WILL TEETER ON THE EDGE OF VFR AT KDVL  
AND KFAR.  
 
 
   
FGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
ND...WINTER STORM WATCH FROM TUESDAY MORNING THROUGH LATE TUESDAY  
NIGHT FOR NDZ006>008-014>016-024-026>030-038-039-054.  
MN...WINTER STORM WATCH FROM TUESDAY MORNING THROUGH LATE TUESDAY  
NIGHT FOR MNZ001>005-007>009-013>017-022>024-027-028-  
030>032.  
 
 
 
 
 
DISCUSSION...RAFFERTY  
AVIATION...RAFFERTY  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab ND Page
The Nexlab MN Page
Main Text Page