133  
FXUS65 KMSO 181014  
AFDMSO  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MISSOULA MT  
414 AM MDT WED MAR 18 2026  
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
KEY MESSAGES:  
 
- STREAM AND CREEK FLOODING CONCERNS THROUGH TODAY FOR NORTHWEST  
MONTANA, ESPECIALLY LINCOLN AND SANDERS COUNTIES  
 
- WELL ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES AND GUSTY WINDS AT TIMES INTO  
FRIDAY, ESPECIALLY I-90 SOUTHWARD  
 
DEEP MOISTURE FROM AN ATMOSPHERIC RIVER WILL BE DIRECTED INTO THE  
NORTHERN ROCKIES THROUGHOUT THE WEEK. THE HEAVIEST PRECIPITATION  
IS EXPECTED THIS MORNING, WITH A SECONDARY SURGE ARRIVING ON  
FRIDAY. HIGH-RESOLUTION GUIDANCE INDICATES MEAN PRECIPITATION  
AMOUNTS RANGING FROM 1.50 TO 2.50 INCHES OVER THE HIGHER TERRAIN  
OF THE CABINET, WHITEFISH, AND SWAN RANGES THROUGH EARLY THURSDAY.  
CONVERSELY, VALLEY LOCATIONS WILL SEE SIGNIFICANTLY LESS  
PRECIPITATION, GENERALLY AROUND 0.10 TO 0.30 INCHES. WITH SNOW  
LEVELS REMAINING UNUSUALLY HIGH AT 7,000 TO 8,000 FEET,  
ACCUMULATING SNOWFALL WILL BE RESTRICTED TO THE HIGHEST PEAKS OF  
NORTHWEST MONTANA.  
 
HYDROLOGICAL & TEMPERATURE IMPACTS: THE COMBINATION OF RAIN AND  
WARM TEMPERATURES WILL ACCELERATE MELT FROM A PRIMED SNOWPACK IN  
NORTHWEST MONTANA. THERE IS CONCERN FOR RAPIDLY RISING STREAMS AND  
CREEKS, ESPECIALLY IN SANDERS AND LINCOLN COUNTIES AS RAIN RATES  
PICK UP BY LATE THIS EVENING. ALSO WATCH FOR PONDING OF WATER AND  
ROCK/SNOW SLIDES ALONG ROADWAYS. BOTH DAYTIME HIGHS AND NIGHTTIME  
LOWS WILL WARM TO NEAR-RECORD LEVELS BY LATE WEEK, RUNNING 10 TO  
20 DEGREES ABOVE SEASONAL NORMALS, ESPECIALLY FROM I-90 SOUTHWARD.  
THE COMBINATION OF ANOMALOUS WARMTH AND RAIN-ON-SNOW POTENTIAL  
WILL LIKELY DEGRADE THE SNOWPACK, LEADING TO WORSENING AVALANCHE  
CONDITIONS. BACKCOUNTRY RECREATIONISTS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO  
MONITOR LOCAL AVALANCHE CENTERS FOR THE LATEST UPDATES THIS WEEK.  
 
WINDS: BREEZY TO LOCALLY WINDY CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST, WITH GUSTS  
OF 25 TO 35 MPH, ESPECIALLY DURING THE AFTERNOON/EVENING HOURS.  
LOCALIZED HIGHER GUSTS ARE POSSIBLE IN AREAS PRONE TO THE MOUNTAIN  
WAVE ACTIVITY FAVORED BY THIS PATTERN. THESE WINDS MAY CREATE  
CHOPPY CONDITIONS ON AREA LAKES AND COULD OCCASIONALLY DISRUPT  
OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES. FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS WILL ALSO BE HEIGHTENED  
IN SOUTHWEST MONTANA DUE TO A COMBINATION OF LOW HUMIDITY AND  
GUSTY WINDS THE LATTER HALF OF THIS WEEK.  
 
CHANGES BY SATURDAY: A COLD FRONT IS FORECAST TO SWEEP THROUGH THE  
REGION ON SATURDAY. THIS WILL BRING A RETURN TO COOLER, MORE  
SEASONABLE TEMPERATURES, ALONG WITH A ROUND OF LIGHT PRECIPITATION  
AND GUSTY WINDS. AT THIS TIME, IMPACTS FROM THIS WEEKEND FRONTAL  
PASSAGE APPEAR MINIMAL.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
AN ATMOSPHERIC RIVER WILL DIRECT MOISTURE ACROSS THE  
REGION THE DAY, BRINGING PRECIPITATION PRIMARILY TO AREAS NORTH OF  
I-90. THIS PRECIPITATION WILL BE LARGELY TERRAIN-FOCUSED, WITH  
SNOW LEVELS REMAINING UNUSUALLY HIGH NEAR 7,000 FEET, RESULTING IN  
FREQUENT MOUNTAIN OBSCURATIONS ACROSS NORTHWEST MONTANA.  
 
SURFACE WINDS FROM THE WEST AND SOUTHWEST WILL BECOME GUSTY EACH  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING THROUGHOUT THE WEEK, OCCASIONALLY EXCEEDING  
25 KNOTS AT VALLEY TERMINALS. WHILE THESE SURFACE WINDS WILL  
GENERALLY DECOUPLE AND DIMINISH OVERNIGHT, RIDGE TOP WINDS WILL  
REMAIN ELEVATED AT 25 TO 35 KNOTS. THIS WILL INTRODUCE LOCALIZED  
LOW-LEVEL WIND SHEAR CONCERNS DURING THE OVERNIGHT AND EARLY  
MORNING HOURS.  
 
FINALLY, LINGERING LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE PRESENTS A SLIGHT RISK FOR  
PATCHY MORNING FOG. HOWEVER, ABUNDANT CLOUD COVER AND CONTINUED  
BOUNDARY LAYER MIXING SHOULD SIGNIFICANTLY LIMIT ITS OVERALL  
COVERAGE AND OPERATIONAL IMPACT, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF TERMINAL  
KMSO. BUT EVEN THERE IT SHOULD BREAK SOON AFTER SUNRISE DUE TO THE  
AFOREMENTIONED LIMITING FACTORS.  
 

 
   
MSO WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
MT...FLOOD WATCH THROUGH THIS AFTERNOON FOR FLATHEAD/MISSION  
VALLEYS...KOOTENAI/CABINET REGION...LOWER CLARK FORK REGION.  
 
ID...NONE.  

 
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab MT Page
The Nexlab ID Page Main Text Page