841  
FXUS63 KFSD 171715  
AFDFSD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD  
1215 PM CDT TUE MAR 17 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- LIGHT SNOW AND A WINTRY MIX WILL CONTINUE TO MOVE EAST THIS  
AFTERNOON, WITH CALM WEATHER RETURNING TONIGHT.  
 
- A STRONG WARMING TREND IS ON THE WAY INTO THE WEEKEND. THE  
DEGREE OF WARMING HOWEVER WILL BE DETERMINED BY HOW QUICKLY  
SNOW MELTS. IF ALL POTENTIAL IS REALIZED, THEN RECORDS MAY BE  
BROKEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY.  
 
- DEPENDING ON FINE FUEL MOISTURE (GRASS AND BRUSH), FIRE  
CONDITIONS MAY BECOME ELEVATED ALONG THE MISSOURI RIVER  
VALLEY  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 1205 PM CDT TUE MAR 17 2026  
 
THIS AFTERNOON: LOW-LVL WARM ADVECTION CONTINUES TO PASS  
THROUGH THE REGION THIS AFTERNOON. LIGHT SNOW CONTINUES TO MOVE  
EAST INTO MN/IA THIS AFTERNOON, LEAVING LIGHT ACCUMULATIONS IN  
IT'S WAKE. THE PASSAGE OF THE 850 MB TROUGH SIGNALS THE ARRIVAL  
OF >0C TEMPERATURES ALOFT, ALSO SUGGESTING THAT A FEW LINGERING  
CONVECTIVE SHOWERS COULD PRODUCE A WINTRY MIX AS THEY MOVE EAST  
OF I-29 THROUGH LATE AFTERNOON. ANY WINTRY MIX ON TOP OF LIGHT  
SNOW SHOULDN'T ADD ANY ADDITIONAL TRAVEL HAZARDS.  
 
TONIGHT: WINDS WILL REMAIN LIGHT AND VARIABLE TO WESTERLY THROUGH  
THE OVERNIGHT HOURS AS A SURFACE WARM FRONT BEGINS TO MOVE  
EASTWARD. EARLY EVENING LOW TEMPERATURES MAY BE POSSIBLE, WITH A  
FLATTENED OR REVERSED DIURNAL CURVE DEVELOPING AFTER 3AM AS LOW-LVL  
WARM ADVECTION INCREASES. WITH INCREASING LOW-LVL MOISTURE FROM SNOW  
MELT, WE MAY HAVE TO WATCH FOR FOG DEVELOPMENT BY DAYBREAK. NAM  
BASED MODELS ARE VERY BULLISH ON THIS IDEA, BUT OFTEN OVER  
SATURATE A COLD NEAR SURFACE LAYER.  
 
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY: A BUILDING MID-LVL RIDGE OVER THE SOUTHWESTERN  
US WILL PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE THROUGH THE MIDDLE AND END OF THE  
WEEK, PUSHING IMPACTFUL WEATHER TO OUR NORTHWEST, WHILE ALLOWING  
BROAD AND INTENSE LOW-LVL WARM ADVECTION TO STREAM INTO THE PLAINS.  
THE PASSAGE OF A SUBTLE SHORTWAVE MOVING THROUGH NORTHWEST FLOW ON  
WEDNESDAY WILL INDUCE A WARMER SOUTHWESTERLY SURFACE FLOW. A SLIGHT  
INCREASE IN MID-UPR CLOUD COVER MAY TEMPER HIGHS SLIGHTLY, BUT THE  
LATEST GUIDANCE CONTINUES TO INDICATE HIGHS PUSHING INTO THE 40S AND  
50S WEDNESDAY, WITH POTENTIAL FOR THE 50S AND 60S IN MOST AREAS  
THURSDAY. FORECAST WILD CARDS INCLUDE THE POTENTIAL OF INCREASING  
STRATUS OVER THE MELTING SNOW PACK ALONG WITH WET GROUND THAT COULD  
ACTUALLY LIMIT THE SURFACE WARMING. THAT SAID THURSDAY'S HIGH  
TEMPERATURES MAY HAVE THE MOST VARIANCE AND IT'S POSSIBLE  
FORECAST TEMPERATURES MAY COOL, ESPECIALLY ALONG AND EAST OF A  
LINE FROM HURON TO SIOUX FALLS TO SPENCER. WE'RE ALREADY SEEING  
MODELS CATCH ONTO THE LINGERING IMPACTS OF SNOW COVER, AND  
FUTURE TEMPERATURE FALLS MAY CONTINUE. ONE THING TO NOTE IS HOW  
INDIVIDUAL MODELS ARE HANDLING THE CURRENT SNOW DEPTH. SEVERAL  
MODELS ARE NOT INITIALIZING WELL WITH SNOW DEPTH (ESPECIALLY  
EAST OF I-29), AND MAY BE ERODING THE PACK TOO QUICKLY THROUGH  
THURSDAY.  
 
FRIDAY-MONDAY: A 592DM RIDGE WILL CONTINUE TO BUILD OVER THE FOUR  
CORNERS REGION THROUGH THE END OF THE WEEK, SURGING A  
CLIMATOLOGICALLY SIGNIFICANT SURGE OF LOW-LVL TEMPERATURES EASTWARD  
THROUGH THE PLAINS. ESAT TABLES FROM THE NAEFS/GEFS/EC WOULD ALL  
INDICATE THAT BOTH THE 700:500 MB RIDGE HEIGHTS ARE ALL AT THE EDGE  
OF THE 30 YEAR CLIMATOLOGY CENTERED AROUND MID-MARCH. LOW-LVL  
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES ARE ALL AOA THE 99TH PERCENTILE ALONG THE  
WESTERN HIGH PLAINS AND LOWER TOWARDS THE 90TH PERCENTILE TOWARDS  
THE GREAT LAKES. WITH THE INCREASE IN SOUTHERLY SURFACE FLOW FRIDAY  
AND SATURDAY, THE BIGGEST QUESTIONS WILL BE HOW MUCH SNOW LINGERS,  
ANY STRATUS POTENTIAL, AND IMPACTS OF WET GROUND ON TEMPERATURES.  
 
THE LATEST NBM CONTINUES TO NARROW DOWN THE TEMPERATURE SPREADS IN  
THE 25/75TH PERCENTILE) ON FRIDAY BELOW 5 DEGREES IN MOST AREAS, BUT  
DOES MAINTAIN A NEARLY 10 DEGREE SPREAD OVER SW MINNESOTA. SATURDAY  
IS THE DAY THAT THINGS REALLY GET INTERESTING, BUT ALSO VERY  
CHALLENGING TO FORECAST. MOST MEDIUM RANGE DETERMINISTIC AND  
ENSEMBLE GUIDANCE PRODUCES STRONG GUSTY SOUTHWEST WINDS THROUGH THE  
DAYTIME HOURS OF SATURDAY. THESE WINDS, INTERTWINED WITH THE AXIS OF  
THE LOW-LVL THERMAL RIDGE, HAVE THE POTENTIAL TO SURGE AFTERNOON  
HIGH TEMPERATURES WELL INTO THE 70S AND INTO THE 80S. THE 13Z NBM  
CONTINUES TO SHOW AN EXTREME LEVEL OF SPREAD IN THE 25/75TH  
PERCENTILE DATA WITH POTENTIAL ALL THE WAY FROM THE UPPER 50S TO  
LOWER 60S TO THE UPPER 70S AND LOWER 80S. THE 10/90TH SPREAD OF THE  
NBM IS OVER 25 DEGREES IN MOST AREAS. DETERMINISTIC MODELS ARE NEAR  
THE EDGE OF ALL OF THE ENSEMBLES, AND THOSE SIMILAR CONCERNS OF SNOW  
COVER, CLOUDS, AND WET GROUND CONTINUE. IF ALL THE STARS ALIGN,  
RECORDS WILL CERTAINLY BE POSSIBLE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, MAKING  
THE BLIZZARD OF LAST WEEKEND A MEMORY.  
 
THERE IS ALSO SOME POTENTIAL FOR A STRONGER COLD FRONT TO SINK  
SOUTHWARD LATE SATURDAY INTO SUNDAY, WHICH IS LEADING TO A BIT MORE  
SPREAD IN ENSEMBLE GUIDANCE. THIS FRONT, MOSTLY LIMITED IN  
MOISTURE, COULD PRODUCE VERY LIGHT RAIN TO SNOW INTO SUNDAY ALONG  
WITH COOLING TEMPERATURES CONSIDERABLY. COOL AND DRY CONDITIONS  
CONTINUE INTO MONDAY AS HIGHS SETTLE BACK INTO THE 40S.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1151 AM CDT TUE MAR 17 2026  
 
LIGHT SNOW WILL CONTINUE TO MOVE EAST AND SOUTHEAST THROUGH THE  
AREA THIS AFTERNOON. GENERALLY MVFR TO IFR CEILINGS AND  
VISIBILITY HAVE BEEN REPORTED IN SNOW THIS MORNING, WHICH WILL  
IMPROVE QUICKLY ONCE SNOW SLIDES EAST OF THE AREA. SOME MINOR  
BLOWING SNOW MAY BE POSSIBLE, BUT WINDS ARE NOT STRONG ENOUGH TO  
LOFT SNOW ANY MORE THAN 1-2' OFF THE GROUND LEVEL.  
 
SKIES CLEAR FROM WEST TO EAST SLOWLY THIS EVENING AND OVERNIGHT  
AS WINDS TURN VARIABLE. SOME MINOR WESTERLY WARM SURFACE FLOW  
MAY BRING AN INCREASED RISKS FOR FOG TO DEVELOP, THOUGH  
PROBABILITIES REMAIN VERY LOW. WILL NOT INCLUDE ANY MENTION IN  
THIS TAF, BUT CONDITIONS WILL NEED TO BE MONITORED.  
 
 
   
CLIMATE  
 
ISSUED AT 1205 PM CDT TUE MAR 17 2026  
 
EXTREMELY WARM AIR WILL TRY TO MOVE EASTWARD LATE THIS WEEK INTO  
THIS WEEKEND. HERE IS A LOOK AT RECORDS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY  
 
RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES:  
 
MARCH 20:  
KFSD: 73/2022, KSUX: 79/2015, KHON: 75/1911, KMHE: 77/1994  
 
MARCH 21:  
KFSD: 83/1910, KSUX: 85/1910, KHON: 84/1907, KMHE: 88/1907  
 
RECORD HIGH MINIMUM TEMPERATURES:  
 
MARCH 21:  
KFSD: 49/1938, KSUX: 48/2012, KHON: 45/1938  
 
 
   
FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
SD...NONE.  
MN...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
DISCUSSION...DUX  
AVIATION...DUX  
CLIMATE...DUX  
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