675  
FXUS63 KFSD 030905  
AFDFSD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD  
405 AM CDT FRI OCT 3 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- WELL ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES CONTINUE THROUGH SATURDAY. A  
FEW RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES AND WARM LOW TEMPERATURES ARE  
POSSIBLE TODAY-SATURDAY. WIDESPREAD MODERATE TO LOCALLY MAJOR  
HEAT RISK DUE TO THE UNSEASONABLE HEAT.  
 
- HOT, DRY AND BREEZY TO WINDY AFTERNOONS WILL LEAD TO ELEVATED  
FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS TODAY (LOCALIZED) AND SATURDAY (MORE  
WIDESPREAD WITH STRONGER WIND). USE CAUTION TO AVOID SPARKING  
FIRE IN DRY CROPS AND GRASSES AS RAPID SPREAD IS POSSIBLE.  
 
- RAIN CHANCES FOR THE LATTER HALF OF THE WEEKEND ARE TRENDING  
LOWER/FARTHER WEST, WITH <20% CHANCE OF RAINFALL EXCEEDING  
0.10" IN OUR FORECAST AREA THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT.  
 
- NEAR NORMAL DAYTIME HIGHS RETURN EARLY-MID NEXT WEEK, WITH  
LOW-MODERATE RAIN CHANCES (30-40%) FOCUSED TOWARD SIOUX CITY  
TO STORM LAKE MONDAY MORNING.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 405 AM CDT FRI OCT 3 2025  
 
TODAY-SATURDAY: ANOMALOUSLY STRONG MID-UPPER LEVEL RIDGE REMAINS  
ACROSS THE PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TODAY, SHIFTING  
SLIGHTLY EAST SATURDAY AS A TROUGH AND CORRESPONDING COLD FRONT  
BEGIN TO MOVE INTO THE HIGH PLAINS/WESTERN DAKOTAS. BUBBLE OF  
WARM AIR BENEATH THE RIDGE WILL LEAD TO A COUPLE MORE VERY WARM  
TO UNSEASONABLY HOT DAYS AS DAYTIME TEMPERATURES CLIMB INTO THE  
UPPER 80S TO LOWER 90S. DEW POINTS COULD BE ON THE HUMID SIDE  
THIS MORNING IN THE LOWER 60S, BUT EXPECT SOME MIXING TO BRING  
THOSE VALUES DOWN A BIT DURING THE HOURS OF PEAK HEATING. THAT  
SAID, GIVEN THAT THESE TEMPERATURES ARE NEAR RECORD LEVELS FOR  
EARLY OCTOBER, MODERATE (LEVEL 2 OF 4) HEAT RISK IS FORECAST  
ACROSS MOST OF THE AREA TODAY AND SATURDAY. THIS COULD IMPACT  
THOSE MORE SENSITIVE TO HEAT SUCH AS OLDER ADULTS AND INFANTS,  
AND POTENTIALLY ATHLETES AND OUTDOOR WORKERS, ESPECIALLY THOSE  
WITHOUT EFFECTIVE COOLING AND/OR HYDRATION. TAKE PRECAUTIONS IF  
ATTENDING OR PARTICIPATING IN AREA SPORTS TODAY OR SATURDAY.  
 
INCREASING SOUTHERLY WINDS MAY PROVIDE A BIT OF RELIEF FROM THE  
DAYTIME HEAT, BUT WILL BRING ADDITIONAL CONCERNS WITH REGARD TO  
FIRE WEATHER. MORE DETAIL ON THAT IN THE FIRE WEATHER SECTION OF  
THIS DISCUSSION. IN GENERAL, THOUGH, OUR LIGHT/VARIABLE WINDS  
THIS MORNING WILL TURN SOUTHERLY BY LATE THIS MORNING, WITH  
GUSTS 20-30+ MPH BY MID-LATE AFTERNOON. THE WINDS EASE A BIT  
THROUGH THE NIGHTTIME HOURS, BUT ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN BREEZY  
ENOUGH TO HOLD LOWS IN THE MID 60S TO AROUND 70. THIS WILL LEAD  
INTO AN EQUALLY WARM BUT EVEN WINDIER DAY SATURDAY AS A 40-45KT  
LOW LEVEL JET SHIFTS INTO OUR FORECAST AREA. EFFICIENT MIXING IN  
THE LOW LEVEL SOUTH-SOUTHWEST FLOW COULD MIX GUSTS OF 35-45 MPH  
TO THE SURFACE SATURDAY AFTERNOON, LIKELY REMAINING JUST BELOW  
ADVISORY LEVELS IN MOST AREAS.  
 
SATURDAY NIGHT-MONDAY: THE AFOREMENTIONED UPPER TROUGH AND COLD  
FRONT BEGIN TO MOVE INTO OUR FAR WESTERN COUNTIES SATURDAY NIGHT  
WHICH COULD TRIGGER A FEW SHOWERS/ISOLATED STORMS. HOWEVER, THE  
LATEST MODEL TRENDS FOCUS BETTER RAIN CHANCES WEST THROUGH NORTH  
OF OUR FORECAST AREA, WITH LOCATIONS WEST OF I-29 PERHAPS SEEING  
A FEW HUNDREDTHS OF RAINFALL SATURDAY NIGHT. THIS WESTWARD TREND  
AND GENERAL LACK OF SUFFICIENT INSTABILITY DID RESULT IN THE SPC  
DAY 2 OUTLOOK BEING SCALED BACK TO WEST OF OUR CWA FOR SATURDAY  
NIGHT. THE COLD FRONT THEN SLOWLY MOVES EAST ACROSS THE FORECAST  
AREA ON SUNDAY-SUNDAY EVENING, BUT LIMITED FORCING/MOISTURE WILL  
AGAIN KEEP RAINFALL CHANCES VERY LOW. ASIDE FROM THE WIND SHIFT  
ASSOCIATED WITH THE FRONT, THE MOST NOTABLE CHANGE WILL BE THE  
COOLER TEMPERATURES. STILL SOME UNCERTAINTY REGARDING THE EXACT  
TIMING OF THE FRONT, BUT GENERALLY SPEAKING, LOCATIONS BEHIND  
THE FRONT BY SUNDAY AFTERNOON COULD SEE HIGHS 15-20F COOLER THAN  
SATURDAY, WHILE AREAS STILL AHEAD OF THE FRONT COULD STILL CLIMB  
INTO THE LOWER-MID 80S. WINDS WILL BE LESS GUSTY WITH A WEAKER  
GRADIENT ALONG THE FRONT, THOUGH STILL BREEZY WITH GUSTS 20-30  
MPH AS WINDS SWING FROM SOUTHWEST TO NORTHWEST.  
 
THE LOW LEVEL FRONT HANGS UP JUST SOUTH OF OUR FORECAST AREA BY  
EARLY MONDAY, WHICH BRINGS A LOW-MODERATE (30-40%) CHANCE FOR  
LIGHT RAIN SHOWERS TO SOUTHEAST PORTIONS OF THE CWA MONDAY  
MORNING, MAINLY SOUTH OF HIGHWAY 18.  
 
TUESDAY ONWARD: THE PATTERN BECOMES A BIT MORE MUDDLED THROUGH  
THE MIDWEEK PERIOD, ESPECIALLY BY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY AS  
MODELS DIVERGE ON DEVELOPMENT OF A POTENTIAL TROUGH TO OUR WEST.  
DEPENDING ON THE TIMING/STRENGTH, WE COULD SEE SOME LIGHT RAIN  
CHANCES BY THE END OF THIS FORECAST PERIOD ON THURSDAY. PRIOR TO  
THEN, HOWEVER, FOCUS WILL BE ON TEMPERATURES WHICH ARE MUCH  
CLOSER TO SEASONAL NORMALS, WITH A DAY OR TWO OF HIGHS ONLY IN  
THE 60S. A BACKDOOR COLD FRONT DROPS INTO NORTH DAKOTA/NORTHERN  
MINNESOTA TUESDAY-TUESDAY NIGHT, AND WITH A SURFACE HIGH IN OUR  
AREA PROVIDING MOSTLY CLEAR SKIES/LIGHT WINDS, MAY HAVE TO WATCH  
OUR NIGHTTIME LOWS TUESDAY NIGHT/EARLY WEDNESDAY FOR A BIT OF  
FROST. HOWEVER, BETTER CHANCES CURRENTLY LOOK TO REMAIN NORTH OF  
HIGHWAY 14.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1007 PM CDT THU OCT 2 2025  
 
A MID-LVL CLOUD DECK CONTINUES TO DEVELOP OVER CENTRAL AND NORTH  
CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA AT 10PM. THIS AREA OF CLOUDS WILL CONTINUE  
TO DRIFT EAST NORTHEAST THROUGH THE NIGHT. WINDS CONTINUE TO  
TURN LIGHT AND VARIABLE IN MOST LOCATIONS.  
 
VFR CONDITIONS PERSIST THROUGH FRIDAY, WITH SOUTHERLY WINDS  
GUSTING AS HIGH AS 25 MPH AT TIMES.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 405 AM CDT FRI OCT 3 2025  
 
INCREASING SOUTHERLY WINDS TODAY AND SATURDAY WILL BRING SOME  
FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS TO THE AREA AS WE HEAD INTO THE FIRST  
WEEKEND OF OCTOBER. TODAY WILL SEE WINDS GUSTING 20-30 MPH IN  
MOST AREAS BY THIS AFTERNOON, WITH SOME HIGHER GUSTS NEAR 35 MPH  
WEST OF THE JAMES RIVER VALLEY. WELL ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES  
APPROACHING 90F THIS AFTERNOON MODEST HUMIDITY LEVELS (AS LOW AS  
30-40%) WILL GENERALLY LEAD TO MODERATE TO HIGH GRASSLAND FIRE  
DANGER. HOWEVER, FULLY CURED CROPS AND/OR GRASSES COULD SEE  
LOCALIZED VERY HIGH FIRE DANGER CONDITIONS AND CAUTION IS  
ADVISED WHEN WORKING IN THESE DRIER AREAS.  
 
SATURDAY BRINGS GREATER CONCERNS AS THE SOUTH-SOUTHWEST WINDS  
STRENGTHEN FURTHER. LATE MORNING TO EARLY EVENING GUSTS OF 35  
TO 45 MPH WILL BE MORE COMMON, WITH HUMIDITY LEVELS FALLING AS  
LOW AS 25 TO 35 PERCENT (PERHAPS LOWER IF MIXING IS EVEN MORE  
EFFICIENT). THIS WILL LEAD TO MORE WIDESPREAD HIGH TO VERY HIGH  
GRASSLAND FIRE DANGER IN THE GREENER GRASSES. HOWEVER, THE DRIER  
GRASSES AND ESPECIALLY CROPS WOULD BE SUSCEPTIBLE TO RAPID FIRE  
SPREAD (LOCALIZED RED FLAG CONDITIONS POSSIBLE), AS MARGINAL  
HUMIDITY LEVELS COULD EASILY BE OVERCOME BY THE STRONGER WINDS  
CURRENTLY FORECAST. WITH THIS IN MIND, FARMERS AND OTHERS  
WORKING OUTDOORS WILL NEED TO BE MINDFUL OF THEIR EQUIPMENT  
USAGE TO AVOID SPARKING A FIRE IN THE DRY FUELS.  
 

 
   
FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
SD...NONE.  
MN...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
DISCUSSION...JH  
AVIATION...DUX  
FIRE WEATHER...JH  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab SD Page
The Nexlab IA Page
The Nexlab MN Page
The Nexlab NE Page Main Text Page