Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Great Falls, MT
Issued by NWS Great Falls, MT
Versions:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
335 FXUS65 KTFX 061123 AFDTFX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Great Falls MT 523 AM MDT Sat Jul 6 2024 ...Aviation Section Updated... .SYNOPSIS... Cooler than average temperatures persist for most areas through Sunday. Showers and thunderstorms will be around again today, and to a lesser extent tomorrow before a warming and drying trend commences Monday. Hot temperatures look to last through the week and into next weekend, with the only uncertainty related to exactly how hot it will get. && .DISCUSSION... Through Sunday night...Broad troughing in place across the central and eastern CONUS, alongside a building ridge just off the coast of the western CONUS has kept the Northern Rockies in a cool and unsettled northwesterly flow aloft over the past five days or so. This trend contiues through Sunday, with temperatures in most areas continuing to stay below average for this time of the year. Showers and thunderstorms appear to be mostly the afternoon variety today, though an embedded wave within the northwesterly flow presently diving southeastward from Canada along the Continental Divide will allow for some morning showers and isolated thunderstorms across portions of Central and North-central Montana. Given weak instability and shear, thunderstorms today look to be unorganized in nature. The building upper level ridge begins to nudge eastward Sunday, though northwesterly flow will persist for one more day across the region. There doesn`t look to be any embedded waves diving southeastward through this flow however, so chances for showers and thunderstorms look to decrease quite a bit. Given marginally cool temperatures aloft will still be around, showers and an isolated thunderstorm or two will remain in the cards in the afternoon Sunday, mostly over terrain. Monday through next weekend...The aforementioned upper level ridge will continue to slowly shift eastward, inland across the western CONUS Monday into the middle of next week. A warming trend will commence as a result, with temperatures pushing well into the 90`s at lower elevations by Wednesday. The brute of the heat looks to peak around Thursday, but an increasing share of longer range ensemble members favor well above average temperatures persisting into at least next weekend. -AM && .AVIATION... 06/12Z TAF Period The main concern this TAF period will be for brief sub-VFR conditions around showers and isolated thunderstorms through the evening today. Briefly gusty winds, lightning, and small hail will all be concerns with any thunderstorm that forms. Although thunderstorms will be around much of the region today, mention in TAFs was omitted for most sites at this time due to lack of confidence in direct impacts to terminals as well as timing when thunderstorms will be around terminals. -AM Refer to weather.gov/zlc for more detailed regional aviation weather and hazard information. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... GTF 76 50 81 55 / 30 10 10 0 CTB 75 49 82 52 / 20 10 0 0 HLN 82 55 87 58 / 30 10 10 0 BZN 79 48 79 51 / 20 20 10 0 WYS 73 38 74 38 / 20 10 10 0 DLN 80 46 79 49 / 10 10 0 0 HVR 78 53 82 55 / 30 20 10 0 LWT 71 47 74 50 / 50 10 10 0 && .TFX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ http://www.weather.gov/greatfalls