Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Missoula, MT
Issued by NWS Missoula, MT
309 FXUS65 KMSO 070938 AFDMSO Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Missoula MT 238 AM MST Fri Nov 7 2025 .DISCUSSION... KEY MESSAGES: - Cold frontal passage this morning; short burst of heavy snow and gusty winds over mountain passes. - High pressure builds this weekend; risk for fog and low clouds Sunday and Monday mornings. Surface observations and regional radar imagery this morning highlights a quick moving cold front sweeping across eastern Washington and the Idaho Panhandle. Wind gusts of 30-50 mph have been widespread as of 2AM MST this morning across eastern Washington, with temperatures and snow levels falling quickly behind the front. Given these trends, confidence is medium-high for a burst of moderate-heavy snow, and gusty winds across area mountain passes this morning. The front will reach Lost Trail, MacDonald Pass, the Montana Highway 1 corridor, Butte, and Homestake Pass between 700-900 AM MST. Local research has shown these areas are more vulnerable to snow squalls and this threat will be watched closely. The front will push east of the divide by early afternoon, with westerly wind gusts of 20-30 mph in valley areas and 30-45 mph along the divide and higher terrain. Scattered showers will continue along the Idaho/Montana border and Clearwater Mountains, with most areas drying out following the frontal passage. High pressure builds in Friday night into Saturday morning. Stable conditions this weekend may lead to low clouds and fog, especially Sunday into Monday as the ridge strengthens. Areas with persistent fog will be 5-10 degrees cooler than currently forecast, though pinpointing specific locations remains difficult. Ensemble guidance indicates the ridge may begin to flatten next week, with most guidance suggesting the Monday afternoon into Tuesday timeframe. As a ridge flattens, a decaying plume of Pacific moisture may move overhead, leading showers and light high elevation snow (6000-7000 ft). && .AVIATION...The primary aviation hazard early this morning will be significant mechanical turbulence as southerly winds have developed over the higher terrain and Camas Prairie (near Grangeville, ID) ahead of a strong cold front quickly moving across eastern Washington and the Idaho Panhandle. Gusts exceeding 30 to 35 kts have been observed, which will generate turbulence, especially over ridges and through mountain passes. Low-Level Wind Shear (LLWS) will also be a threat for terminals near terrain, including KGIC and KBTM, as strong southerly flow remains just above the surface. Winds will gradually shift and become more westerly after 07/1200z, with gusts to 25 kts becoming more widespread area wide through this afternoon. The cold front will move rapidly northwest to southeast across western Montana and north central Idaho, introducing widespread flight hazards this tomorrow morning (10z to 17z). Northwest MT and North-Central ID (KGPI, KMSO, KGIC) can expect widespread MVFR conditions to develop as the main precipitation band moves through. Ceilings and visibilities will drop in snow and rain/snow mix. For Southwest MT (KBTM, KSMN), the front will transition to a more convective, showery nature. Vigorous snow showers will develop from Lolo Pass south and east around sunrise (12Z-15Z) for elevations above 4,000 feet. These showers will be capable of producing rapid, short-duration reductions to IFR or LIFR (visibility one half mile or less) in heavy snow, accompanied by gusty SW/W winds. && .MSO WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MT...None. ID...None. && $$