256  
FXUS65 KTFX 110515  
AFDTFX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GREAT FALLS MT  
1115 PM MDT FRI OCT 10 2025  
 
AVIATION SECTION UPDATED.  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- A SIGNIFICANT PATTERN CHANGE BEGINS ON SATURDAY, WITH A  
TRANSITION TO BREEZY AND WINDY CONDTIONS AND SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS  
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. A FEW STORMS MAY CONTAIN HEAVY DOWNPOURS  
AND POSE A LOCALIZED FLOODING RISK TO SUSCEPTIBLE BURN SCARS.  
 
- WIDESPREAD PRECIPITATION, MOSTLY MOUNTAIN SNOW, AND MUCH COOLER  
TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY.  
 
- BELOW AVERAGE TEMPERATURES CONTINUE FOR AT LEAST THE FIRST HALF  
OF NEXT WEEK WITH DAY TO DAY SCATTERED SHOWER ACTIVITY AND MOUNTAIN  
SNOW.  
 
 
   
UPDATE  
 
/ISSUED 821 PM MDT FRI OCT 10 2025/  
 
BIGGEST UPDATE THIS EVENING WAS TO INCREASE PRECIPITATION SLIGHTLY  
TOMORROW BETWEEN NOON AND 6PM WHEN CONVECTION IS EXPECTED TO BE  
MOST PREVALENT. LUDWIG  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
/ISSUED 821 PM MDT FRI OCT 10 2025/  
 
- METEOROLOGICAL OVERVIEW:  
 
SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT BECOMES ESTABLISHED OVER THE NORTHERN  
ROCKIES TODAY IN RESPONSE TO A TROUGH MOVING INTO THE PACIFIC  
NORTHWEST. AN AN INITIAL SHORTWAVE WILL BRING A FEW WIDELY SCATTERED  
SHOWERS AND PERHAPS A FEW THUNDERSTORMS TO SOUTHWEST MT THIS MORNING  
BEFORE ADDITIONAL WAVES SEND SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS  
THROUGH THE REGION AGAIN TONIGHT INTO SATURDAY. STRENGTHENING SOUTH  
TO SOUTHWESTERLY H700 WINDS ON THE ORDER OF 30 TO 40 KTS WILL BRING  
BREEZY TO WINDY CONDITIONS TO THE SOUTHWEST TODAY, WITH WINDS ALSO  
INCREASING ALONG THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN FRONT TONIGHT INTO SATURDAY. THE  
SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW WILL ALSO ADVECT MOISTURE NORTHWARD INTO THE  
REGION WITH PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES APPROACHING THE 0.75 INCH MARK  
FOR AREAS ALONG AND SOUTHEAST OF A DILLON TO HAVRE LINE ON SATURDAY.  
THIS COMBINED WITH CAPE VALUES IN THE 100 TO 400 J/KG LEVEL MAY  
RESULT IN SOME STORMS PRODUCING LOCALIZED HEAVY DOWNPOURS IN  
ADDITION TO ISOLATED INSTANCES GUSTY WINDS, AND HAIL.  
 
THE MAIN TROUGH MOVES INTO THE NORTHERN ROCKIES SATURDAY NIGHT INTO  
SUNDAY WITH THE SOUTH END OF THE SYSTEM BECOMING SHEARED OFF FROM  
THE GENERAL CIRCULATION. ALTHOUGH THIS ADDS AT LEAST SOME  
UNCERTAINTY TO THE FORECAST, THERE'S A GENERAL EXPECTATION FOR THE  
MOST WIDESPREAD PRECIPITATION TO OCCUR BETWEEN SATURDAY NIGHT AND  
MONDAY WITH H700 TEMPERATURES FALLING TO AROUND -10C OVER  
CENTRAL/NORTH-CENTRAL MT. DESPITE THE COLD AIR ALOFT BEING A LITTLE  
DISJOINTED FROM THE AREAS OF HEAVIEST PRECIPITATION, GENERALLY  
EXPECTED ALONG AND SOUTHEAST OF A BUTTE TO HAVRE LINE, THESE MID-  
/LOW LEVEL TEMPERATURES WILL BE SUFFICIENT TO SUPPORT HEAVY SNOW IN  
THE MOUNTAINS AND AT LEAST SOME LOWER ELEVATION ACCUMULATIONS.  
SNOWFALL WILL INITIALLY BE DRIVEN BY FORCING FROM THE TROUGH/COLD  
FRONT, BUT WILL SHIFT TO WARM AIR ADVECTION AND ISENTROPIC LIFT IN  
ADDITION TO LOW LEVEL EASTERLY FLOW LATER SUNDAY INTO MONDAY.  
 
ANOTHER TROUGH DIVES INTO THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST AND MAINTAINS  
GENERAL LOW GRADE TROUGHING OVER THE NORTHERN ROCKIES EARLY NEXT  
WEEK BEFORE WEAKENING AND SWINGING NORTHEASTWARD INTO MONTANA LATER  
IN THE WEEK. THIS WILL RESULT IN CONTINUED BELOW AVERAGE  
TEMPERATURES AND DAY TO DAY LOWER END SHOWER ACTIVITY AND MOUNTAIN  
SNOW FOR MUCH OF THE WEEK. - RCG  
 
- FORECAST CONFIDENCE & SCENARIOS:  
 
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ON SATURDAY...  
 
SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT AHEAD OF THE APPROACHING UPPER LEVEL TROUGH  
AND ATTENDANT PACIFIC FRONT WILL HELP TO TRANSPORT ANOMALOUSLY HIGH  
(2.5 TO 3.5 STANDARD DEVIATIONS ABOVE NORMAL) PRECIPITABLE WATER  
(PWATS) OVER PORTIONS OF SOUTHWEST AND CENTRAL MONTANA, GENERALLY  
ALONG AND SOUTHEAST OF A BUTTE, TO HELENA, TO LEWISTOWN LINE. THESE  
ANOMALOUSLY HIGH PWATS OF BETWEEN 0.6-0.8" COMBINED WITH INCREASING  
ASCENT FROM THE AFOREMENTIONED FRONT AND UPPER LEVEL TROUGH WILL  
HELP TO SUPPORT THE POTENTIAL FOR LOCALIZED HEAVY RAINFALL,  
ESPECIALLY OVER OR NEAR THE HIGHER TERRAIN BENEATH THE STRONGER  
THUNDERSTORMS. FAST STORM MOTIONS OF BETWEEN 30-40 MPH WILL HELP TO  
LIMIT THE RESIDENCE TIME AND OVERALL (WIDESPREAD) THREAT OF FLOODING  
ACROSS SOUTHWEST AND CENTRAL MONTANA, BUT LOCALIZED FLOODING CAN NOT  
BE RULED OUT. SUSCEPTIBLE AREAS LIKE RECENT BURN SCARS AND URBAN  
AREAS NEAR THE MOUNTAINS (I.E. BOZEMAN, HELENA, AND LEWISTOWN) HAVE  
THE HIGHEST, ALBEIT A 5-10%, CHANCE OF SEEING HEAVY RAINFALL THAT  
WOULD LEAD TO FLOODING. - MOLDAN  
 
SNOW SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY...  
 
SNOW LEVELS WILL BE FALLING THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE DAY ON SATURDAY  
AND INTO THE DAY ON SUNDAY AS AN UPPER LEVEL TROUGH AND ATTENDANT  
FRONTS (INITIAL PACIFIC COLD FRONT ON SATURDAY FOLLOWED BY A  
CANADIAN COLD FRONT SATURDAY NIGHT/SUNDAY) MOVE ACROSS THE NORTHERN  
ROCKIES. SNOW LEVELS AT 06Z SATURDAY OF 9-12KFT WILL FALL TO AROUND  
TO 6-9KFT BY 00Z SUNDAY AS THE AFOREMENTIONED PACIFIC COLD FRONT  
SWEEPS EAST ACROSS SOUTHWEST THROUGH NORTH CENTRAL MONTANA, WITH  
SNOW LEVELS THEN PLUMMETING TO AROUND 2.5-5KFT FROM 03-12Z SUNDAY IN  
A NORTHWEST TO SOUTHEAST FASHION AS THE CANADIAN COLD FRONT DIVES  
SOUTH. HEAVIER PRECIPITATION RATES DURING THE EVENING AND OVERNIGHT  
HOURS ON SATURDAY WILL LEAD TO STRONG DYNAMIC COOLING PROCESSES,  
WHICH WILL LEAD TO AREAS OF LOWER SNOW LEVELS THAN PREVIOUSLY  
MENTIONED; WITH THE NBM 10 PERCENTILE VALUES (REPRESENTING A  
REALISTIC LOW END SNOW SNOW LEVEL) GENERALLY BEING 0.5-1.5KFT LOWER  
THAN THE DETERMINISTIC NBM SNOW LEVELS (PREVIOUSLY MENTIONED). THESE  
HEAVIER BURST OF PRECIPITATION HAVE THE POTENTIAL TO LEAD TO  
ACCUMULATING SNOW ACROSS LOWER ELEVATIONS AND ADDITIONAL MOUNTAIN  
PASSES OUTSIDE OF THE CURRENT WINTER WEATHER HIGHLIGHTS, BUT  
UNCERTAINTY ON EXACT TIMING AND OVERALL COVERAGE HAS LEAD ME TO  
REFRAIN FROM ISSUING ADDITIONAL WINTER HIGHLIGHTS AT THIS TIME.  
 
THE HEAVIEST SNOW FOR NORTHERN AREAS IS EXPECTED ALONG THE ROCKY  
MOUNTAIN FRONT AND THE ADJACENT FOOTHILLS TO THE EAST FOLLOWED BY  
THE CENTRAL ISLAND RANGES AND THEIR NORTHERLY UPSLOPE FOOTHILLS.  
THESE AREAS STAND A 70 TO 90% + CHANCE FOR 6 INCHES OF SNOW OVER A  
48 HOUR PERIOD ENDING 6 PM MONDAY. PLAINS LOCATIONS WEST OF I15 AND  
ALONG HIGHWAY 200/87 FROM ROGERS PASS TO THE GEYSER AREA HAVE A 30  
TO 40% CHANCE FOR SEEING 3 INCHES OR MORE OF SNOW FOR THE SAME  
TIMEFRAME, THOUGH MUCH OF THIS MAY BE MELTED BY WARMER SURFACE  
TEMPERATURES. IMPACTS WILL BE GREATEST IN THE GLACIER NATIONAL PARK  
AREA WHERE OUTDOOR RECREATION MAY BECOME DANGEROUS IN ADDITION TO  
PARK ROUTES BECOMING IMPASSIBLE AND SNOW INDUCED POWER OUTAGES.  
 
MID-LEVEL TEMPERATURES WILL NOT BE AS COLD IN THE SOUTHWEST, THOUGH -  
5 TO -10C H700 TEMPERATURES WILL STILL BE COLD ENOUGH TO LOWER SNOW  
LEVELS TO THE SURFACE AT LEAST BRIEFLY. ADDITIONALLY, THE CORE OF  
HEAVIEST QPF IS EXPECTED HERE WITH MOUNTAIN AREAS SOUTHEAST OF A  
DILLON TO BOZEMAN LINE SEEING PROBABILITIES OF 50 TO 70% CHANCE FOR  
1 INCH OF LIQUID EQUIVALENT PRECIPITATION SATURDAY EVENING THROUGH  
MONDAY EVENING. GIVEN THE SETUP, THE MADISON AND GALLATIN RANGES  
ABOVE 6,000 FEET WILL SEE THE HIGHEST SNOW TOTALS WITH PROBABILITIES  
FOR 6 INCHES OF SNOW OR MORE RUNNING IN THE 50 TO 70% CHANCE RANGE  
FOR THE SAME TIMEFRAME. - MOLDAN/RCG  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
11/06Z TAF PERIOD  
 
INITIAL CONCERN THIS TAF PERIOD WILL BE FOR SHOWERS AND A FEW  
ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS LIFTING NORTHWARD ACROSS PORTIONS OF  
SOUTHWEST MONTANA. A FEW INSTANCES OF LLWS CANNOT BE RULED OUT  
THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT, WITH CONFIDENCE BEING TOO LOW TO WARRANT A  
PERSISTENT MENTION OF IT AT ANY TAF SITE.  
 
ANOTHER PERIOD OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS DEVELOPS IN THE  
AFTERNOON SATURDAY, MOSTLY ACROSS SOUTHWEST MONTANA. PRECIPITATION  
(PRIMARILY RAIN AT LOWER ELEVATIONS, SNOW IN THE MOUNTAINS)  
TRENDS MORE STRATIFORM IN NATURE SATURDAY EVENING, WITH A COLD  
FRONT MOVING SOUTH ACROSS THE CANADIAN BORDER SATURDAY NIGHT. LOW  
CLOUDS WILL BECOME AN INCREASINGLY WIDESPREAD IMPACT LATE DAY  
SATURDAY INTO SATURDAY NIGHT. MOUNTAIN OBSCURATION WILL INCREASE  
THROUGH THE DAY SATURDAY. -AM  
 
 
   
HYDROLOGY  
 
AS SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS PUSH INTO THE AREA ON SATURDAY, A FEW  
OF THE SHOWERS AND STORMS MAY PRODUCE SOME HIGHLY LOCALIZED HEAVY  
RAINFALL. WHILE WIDESPREAD FLOODING IS NOT EXPECTED AT THIS TIME,  
THERE IS A LOW (5% OR SO) CHANCE THAT A BURN SCAR FLASH FLOOD  
COULD OCCUR AT EITHER HORSE GULCH OR WEST FORK BURN SCARS. LUDWIG  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
GTF 49 68 31 38 / 20 40 70 80  
CTB 42 61 28 33 / 10 10 70 80  
HLN 48 65 36 42 / 20 70 80 80  
BZN 45 63 33 44 / 20 90 100 70  
WYS 40 54 25 36 / 70 90 100 80  
DLN 45 62 31 46 / 50 80 80 40  
HVR 45 72 30 41 / 10 10 60 60  
LWT 49 69 31 38 / 0 90 100 80  
 
 
   
TFX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
WINTER STORM WARNING FROM 6 PM SATURDAY TO NOON MDT MONDAY FOR  
EAST GLACIER PARK REGION-SOUTHERN ROCKY MOUNTAIN FRONT.  
 
WINTER STORM WATCH FROM SATURDAY EVENING THROUGH LATE SUNDAY  
NIGHT FOR GALLATIN AND MADISON COUNTY MOUNTAINS AND CENTENNIAL  
MOUNTAINS-LITTLE BELT AND HIGHWOOD MOUNTAINS.  
 
 
 
 
HTTP://WWW.WEATHER.GOV/GREATFALLS  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab MT Page
Main Text Page