858  
FXUS63 KFSD 142107  
AFDFSD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD  
307 PM CST FRI NOV 14 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- A VERY WARM AFTERNOON AS HIGHS CLIMB INTO THE UPPER 60S TO THE  
LOW 80S THIS AFTERNOON. (WARMEST THROUGH THE MISSOURI RIVER  
VALLEY). A FEW RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL BE AT RISK OF  
BEING TIED OR BROKEN.  
 
- A RED FLAG WARNING CONTINUES FOR GREGORY COUNTY UNTIL 6 PM.  
 
- COOLER AND MOSTLY DRY AS WE HEAD INTO THE WEEKEND (A FEW  
SPRINKLES POSSIBLE LATE TONIGHT-EARLY SATURDAY NORTH OF I-90).  
 
- RAIN CHANCES RETURN MONDAY, POSSIBLY MIXING WITH OR CHANGING  
TO SNOW OVERNIGHT INTO TUESDAY MORNING. AREAS SOUTH OF I-90  
ARE CURRENTLY FAVORED TO RECEIVE THE MOST PRECIPITATION,THOUGH  
EXACT AMOUNTS/LOCATION ARE STILL UNCERTAIN.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 300 PM CST FRI NOV 14 2025  
 
TODAY HAS BEEN ANOTHER VERY WARM NOVEMBER DAY. HIGHS SHOULD PEAK IN  
THE UPPER 60S AND EVEN SOME LOW 80S IN THE SOUTH! AVERAGE  
TEMPERATURES FOR NOVEMBER 14 IS THE MID 40S. THAT IS A FULL 20 TO  
NEARLY 25 DEGREES ABOVE AVERAGE. IN THE PREVIOUS FORECAST THE  
POTENTIAL FOR ALL FOUR CLIMATE SITES TO TIE OR BREAK RECORDS WAS  
MENTIONED. UNFORTUNATELY CLOUDS HAVE BEEN A LITTLE THICKER TODAY,  
WHICH HAS LIMITED THE POTENTIAL TO REALLY SMASH THOSE RECORDS.  
HOWEVER, THERE IS STILL AN HOUR OR SO BEFORE PEAK HEATING IS  
ACHIEVED. STAY TUNED FOR THE FINAL RESULTS. FOR REFERENCE, THE  
PREVIOUS RECORDS ARE:  
 
NOVEMBER 14:  
KFSD: 71/1953  
KSUX: 73/1939  
KHON: 71/1942  
KMHE: 75/1953  
 
IN ADDITION TO THE VERY WARM TEMPERATURES, MILDLY BREEZY AND VERY  
DRY CONDITIONS CONTINUE THROUGH THE EARLY PART OF THIS EVENING. NEAR  
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS EXIST FOR AREAS WEST OF THE JAMES  
RIVER VALLEY. HAVE OPTED AGAINST EXPANDING THE RED FLAG WARNING DUE  
TO UNDER PERFORMING WINDS THIS AFTERNOON. THE CURRENT WARNING  
REMAINS IN GOOD SHAPE THROUGH ITS CONCLUSION AT 6PM CST, WHEN  
CONDITIONS BEGIN TO IMPROVE. MORE ON THIS IN THE FIRE WEATHER  
DISCUSSION BELOW.  
 
THIS EVENING A LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL BE LOCATED OVER CENTRAL  
CANADA WITH A COLD FRONT DRAPED SOUTH THROUGH NORTH DAKOTA AND  
EASTERN MONTANA. THIS FRONT IS EXPECTED TO DRIFT SOUTH  
OVERNIGHT, TURNING WINDS AT THE SURFACE TO THE NORTHWEST. WITH  
THE FRONT COMES CHANCES FOR SOME HIGH BASED LIGHT SPRINKLES TO  
LIGHT RAIN SHOWERS ALONG AND NORTH OF HIGHWAY 14. ACCUMULATION,  
IF ANY, WILL BE AT MOST A HUNDREDTH, AND MOST AREAS WILL REMAIN  
DRY. IN ADDITION, A STRONG PUSH OF CAA BEHIND THE FRONT WILL  
TEMPER OUR HIGHS FOR THE WEEKEND. HOWEVER, THEY WILL STILL  
REMAIN WELL ABOVE AVERAGE IN THE 50S TO LOW 60S SATURDAY, AND  
50S SUNDAY. WINDS ON SATURDAY WILL BE BREEZY BEHIND THE COLD  
FRONT, GUSTING 15-20 MPH FOR MOST LOCATIONS. AREAS AT HIGHER  
ELEVATION IN SOUTHWESTERN MINNESOTA MAY TAP INTO THE LLJ,  
INCREASING GUSTS THERE TO 25 MPH AT TIMES. WINDS BECOME LIGHT  
SATURDAY EVENING INTO SUNDAY AS HIGH PRESSURE MOVES INTO THE  
REGION.  
 
EARLY MONDAY MORNING WE SEE A MID-TO-UPPER SHORTWAVE OVER THE  
CENTRAL ROCKIES BEGIN TO MAKE ITS WAY EAST-NORTHEAST INTO OUR  
REGION. AS IT DOES SO IT WILL TRIGGER LIGHT RAIN SHOWERS. THERE  
REMAINS SIGNIFICANT DISAGREEMENT IN MID-TERM GUIDANCE ON STORM TRACK  
AND TIMING. HOWEVER, ALL INDICATE RAIN MOVING IN LATE FRIDAY  
MORNING, AND CONTINUING THROUGH TUESDAY MORNING. GUIDANCE AGREES  
THAT THE MAJORITY OF THE PRECIPITATION WILL FALL ALONG THE SOUTHERN  
MISSOURI COUNTIES INTO NORTHWESTERN IOWA, WITH A MEDIUM PROBABILITY  
(50%) OF 0.2" OF QPF. ELSEWHERE THERE IS A 50-60% PROBABILITY  
OF QPF OF 0.1 INCHES. CURRENT ENSEMBLE GUIDANCE HAS BEEN  
TRENDING A BIT WARMER WITH THE OVERNIGHT TEMPERATURES, KEEPING  
MOST PLACES ABOVE FREEZING EXCEPT FOR OUR NORTHERN COUNTIES.  
THIS WILL WORK TO KEEP PRECIPITATION AS MOSTLY RAIN OVERNIGHT.  
THAT BEING SAID, AREAS AT HIGHER ELEVATION IN SOUTHWESTERN  
MINNESOTA MAY SEE A TRANSITION TO A WINTRY MIX, TO POSSIBLY ALL  
SNOW BY EARLY TUESDAY MORNING. TOTALS ARE UNCERTAIN AT THIS TIME  
AND WILL BE HIGHLY DEPENDENT ON HOW THE THERMAL PROFILES WORK  
OUT.  
 
HIGHS FOR MONDAY AND TUESDAY WILL BE CLOSER TO SEASONAL AVERAGES, IN  
THE 40S. SLIGHTLY WARMER FOR WEDNESDAY, IN THE 40S AND 50S. LOOKING  
ALOFT AND TO THE WEST WE SEE AN UPPER TROUGH DIGGING SOUTH OVER THE  
WESTERN COAST. THIS TROUGH WILL PROGRESS EAST THROUGH THE EARLY PART  
OF THE WEEK, BRINING ANOTHER ROUND OF PRECIPITATION FOR THE LATTER  
HALF OF THE WEEK. DETAILS ARE VERY UNCERTAIN AND CONFIDENCE IN ANY  
SPECIFICS AT THIS POINT IS LOW.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SATURDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1149 AM CST FRI NOV 14 2025  
 
VFR CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED FOR THE PERIOD. SKIES TODAY WILL BE  
MOSTLY CLEAR BUT THERE ARE SOME HIGH BASED CLOUDS FLOWING IN FROM  
THE NORTHWEST AT TIME OF ISSUANCE. CLOUDS WILL CONTINUE TO FLOW IN  
THROUGH THE LATE AFTERNOON AND OVERNIGHT AS A WEAK SYSTEM SKIRTS  
JUST TO THE NORTH OF OUR REGION. REDUCTIONS IN CEILING HEIGHTS TO  
AROUND 150 KFT AFTER MIDNIGHT SHOULD NOT IMPACT FLIGHT RULES.  
 
SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS THIS AFTERNOON WILL BE ON THE BREEZY SIDE  
WITH GUSTS OF 15-20 MPH. AREAS EAST OF I-29, AND PORTIONS OF  
SOUTH CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA WILL HAVE HIGHER GUSTS OF 25-30 MPH.  
WINDS BEGIN TO DECREASE AFTER SUNSET AND BECOME LIGHT. A PERIOD  
OF LLWS IS POSSIBLE AT KFSD AND KSUX AS THE LLJ INCREASES  
OVERHEAD AFTER 15.06Z. THE STRONGER WINDS OF THE LLJ SHIFTS TO  
THE EAST BY SUNRISE.  
 
A COLD FRONT WILL MOVE THROUGH THE REGION DURING THE EARLY  
MORNING HOURS SATURDAY, TURNING WINDS TO THE NORTHWEST. VERY  
LIGHT RAIN SHOWERS ARE POSSIBLE AS A RESULT OF THE FRONTAL  
PASSAGE FROM 15.06Z TO 15.12Z FOR AREAS ALONG AND NORTH OF  
HIGHWAY 14. VERY LITTLE ACCUMULATION IS EXPECTED AND CONFIDENCE  
IS TOO LOW IN SHOWERS IMPACTING KHON TO INCLUDE IN THE TAF.  
CLOUDS CLEAR AFTER DAYBREAK SATURDAY.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 300 PM CST FRI NOV 14 2025  
 
MILDLY GUSTY WINDS, VERY WARM TEMPERATURES FOR NOVEMBER, AND LOW  
RELATIVE HUMIDITY CONTINUE INTO THE LATE AFTERNOON TODAY. WINDS HAVE  
UNDERPERFORMED SOMEWHAT TODAY, WITH ONLY OCCASIONAL GUSTS  
GREATER THAN 25 MPH IN SOUTH CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA, AND  
NORTHWESTERN IOWA. THIS AFTERNOON HAVE TRENDED THE WINDS DOWN  
FROM NBM GUIDANCE A LITTLE TO BETTER MATCH CURRENT CONDITIONS.  
WINDS HAVE ALSO HELPED TO MIX DOWN THE VERY WARM TEMPERATURES  
(16-20 C) IN THE 925 MB LEVEL. THIS WORKED TO WARM AFTERNOON  
HIGHS INTO THE 70S AND EVEN 80S. THE AIR MASS THROUGH THE COLUMN  
TODAY HAS REMAINED VERY DRY, ALLOWING MINIMUM RELATIVE HUMIDITY  
VALUES TO FALL TO LESS THAN 25% FOR AREAS WEST OF THE JAMES  
RIVER VALLEY. WHILE THESE ARE NEAR CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER  
CONDITIONS, THE FACT THAT THE WINDS HAVE UNDERPERFORMED HAS  
PREVENTED THE NEED FOR AN EASTWARD EXPANSION OF THE RED FLAG  
WARNING THIS AFTERNOON. GREGORY COUNTY REMAINS THE ONLY COUNTY  
IN A WARNING WHICH CONTINUES THROUGH 6PM CST. COOLER  
TEMPERATURES AND INCREASED SURFACE MOISTURE WILL KEEP FIRE  
WEATHER CONDITIONS AT BAY FOR THE REST OF THIS WEEKEND AND MUCH  
OF THE UPCOMING WEEK.  
 

 
   
FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
SD...RED FLAG WARNING UNTIL 6 PM CST THIS EVENING FOR SDZ050.  
MN...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
DISCUSSION...AJP  
AVIATION...AJP  
FIRE WEATHER...AJP  
 
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