


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Great Falls, MT
Issued by NWS Great Falls, MT
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223 FXUS65 KTFX 210852 AFDTFX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Great Falls MT 252 AM MDT Thu Aug 21 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Noticeably cooler temperatures expected today through the weekend. - Generally calm conditions expected the next few days with light easterly winds and mostly clear skies. - Isolated showers and thunderstorms return next week, first near the MT/ID border before spreading north over the course of the week.&& .DISCUSSION... - Meteorological Overview: Upper level flow will become northwesterly today as the trough that brought about a breakdown of the upper level ridge that brought very warm temperatures to the area earlier this week, which will bring cooler temperatures to the Treasure State today. This overall pattern will not change much in the short term, as ridging over the West Coast slowly degrades and an upper level low stalls out around the Great Lakes. Our pattern will only begin to change a bit early next week as a weak perturbation in the flow moves over the ridge to our west and stalls out over SW Montana and Idaho, allowing for afternoon showers and thunderstorms to develop. Another weak disturbance embedded in the flow will likely move into North Central and North Eastern Montana later in the week, but at this point the only impact that appears likely will be some light showers and/or thunderstorms. - Forecast Confidence & Scenarios: Confidence is generally high in the forecast through the weekend, as surface high pressure and a stagnant upper level flow present few opportunities for deviations from the forecast. Confidence even remains fairly high into next week as our weak disturbances move through, as the overall weather pattern remains pretty consistent, though pinpointing where and how these weak disturbances will ultimately move through can sometimes be like throwing darts at a dart board with a blindfold on because models can struggle with weak weather systems. Even with these uncertainties, there isnt much of an alternate scenario other than to say that the showers/thunderstorms may wind up either not happening, be slightly more widespread, or be shifted in timing or location, but forecasting where exactly light showers will be next week is beyond the capability of the science at this point. Ludwig && .AVIATION... 21/06Z TAF Period VFR conditions will prevail at all terminals during this TAF Period. However, at the KLWT terminal there is a 20 - 30% chance for showers and thunderstorms during the first 3 hours of this TAF Period which would reduce visibility to MVFR levels. Any thunderstorm will bring gusty, erratic winds. At the KCTB terminal between 21/09Z and 21/16Z ceilings will lower to at least low VFR conditions with a low chance for them to lower to MVFR levels. During this TAF Period a cold front will move through North-central, Central, and Southwestern Montana which will bring a wind shift. Due to wildfires slantwise visibility will be reduced at the KEKS, KBZN, and KWYS terminals during at least a portion of this TAF Period. -IG Refer to weather.gov/zlc for more detailed regional aviation weather and hazard information. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... GTF 81 54 75 48 / 0 10 0 0 CTB 76 48 72 45 / 0 10 0 0 HLN 85 54 80 50 / 0 0 0 0 BZN 86 49 83 45 / 0 0 0 0 WYS 82 40 81 38 / 0 0 0 0 DLN 83 47 82 45 / 0 0 0 0 HVR 80 51 75 47 / 0 0 0 0 LWT 78 51 72 45 / 10 10 0 0 && .TFX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ http://www.weather.gov/greatfalls