Weather



Great Falls, Montana

National Weather Service: Winter Weather Advisory

Current Conditions

 
Temp: 44°
Dew Point: 30°
Humidity: 58%
Wind: West 13 mph
Visibility: 10.0 miles
Pressure: 29.56 in. +
Sky: Partly Cloudy
Wind Chill: 38°

 

Customize Your Weather

Get weather by ZIP code, city, state, airport code or country:

Weather by E-mail: Get forecasts and storm alerts delivered to you.

Sign Up...

Almanac

Average High: 31°

Average Low: 11°

Record high/year: 58° (1893)

Record low/year: -30° (1909)

Sunrise: 8:11 AM

Sunset: 4:52 PM

Detailed History

Sun and Moon

Sunrise: 08:11 AM (MST)

Moon Rise: 01:58 PM (MST)

Sunset: 04:52 PM (MST)

Moon Set: 06:01 AM (MST)

Moon Phase

Today
Jan. 10
Jan. 17
Jan. 26
Feb. 02

 

Local Radar

Local Satellite


Nowcast as of 3:37 PM MST on January 8, 2009

Now

An Arctic cold front is beginning to push southward through north central Montana this afternoon. The cold front moved through the Cut Bank area at 330 PM...and the cold front should arrive in the Great Falls area around 7 PM. Expect temperatures to fall about 20 degrees in one hour behind the cold front. With the rapidly falling temperatures...any standing water will likely freeze. Thus motorist should be prepared for rapidly changing Road conditions. Expect light snow to also begin to develop over the region during the early evening hours.


 

Next 12 Hours

 
4  pm
7  pm
10  pm
1  am
4  am
Snow Snow
Snow Snow
Snow Snow
Snow Snow
Chance of Snow Chance of Snow
32°
13°

 

Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database


5-Day Forecast

Thursday Mostly Cloudy Hi 45° Lo 9° Mostly Cloudy
Friday Chance of Snow Hi 31° Lo 25° Chance of Snow
Saturday Partly Cloudy Hi 40° Lo 22° Partly Cloudy
Sunday Chance of Snow Hi 40° Lo 20° Chance of Snow
Monday Chance of Snow Hi 36° Lo 22° Chance of Snow

 

Forecast for Cascade

Updated: 2:48 PM MST on January 8, 2009
Winter Weather Advisory in effect from 6 PM this evening to 5 am MST Friday...

Tonight

Snow likely in the evening...then snow after midnight. In the mountains...snow. Snow accumulation 2 to 5 inches...4 to 7 inches in the mountains. Lows 10 to 15. Northwest winds 15 to 25 mph with gusts to 45 mph. Wind chill readings zero to 10 below.

 

Friday

Mostly cloudy in the morning...then becoming partly cloudy. A 50 percent chance of snow showers in the morning. In the mountains...a chance of snow showers in the morning...then a slight chance of snow showers in the afternoon. Colder. Highs 25 to 30. West winds 5 to 15 mph. Gusts up to 30 mph in the morning.

 

Friday Night

Partly cloudy. Lows 15 to 25. Southwest winds 10 to 20 mph with gusts to 35 mph.

 

Saturday

Partly cloudy. Highs 35 to 40. West winds 10 to 20 mph.

 

Saturday Night

Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of snow. Lows 20 to 25. West winds 15 to 25 mph.

 

Sunday

Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain and snow. Highs 35 to 40. Chance of precipitation 30 percent.

 

Sunday Night

Mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of snow. Lows 15 to 20.

 

Monday

Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of snow. Highs 30 to 35.

 

Monday Night and Tuesday

Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of snow. Lows 15 to 25. Highs 30 to 40.

 

Tuesday Night and Wednesday

Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of snow. Lows 10 to 20. Highs 25 to 35.

 

Wednesday Night and Thursday

Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of snow. Lows 5 to 10. Highs 20 to 30.

 

 

Probability of Precipitation

Place Today Tonight Friday Saturday Saturday Sunday
Lewistown 12°F 90% 28°F 40% 15°F 0% 39°F 0% 19°F 20% 36°F 30%
Great Falls Arpt 13°F 90% 31°F 30% 25°F 0% 39°F 10% 22°F 20% 39°F 20%

  = Probability of Precipitation

 Winter Weather Advisory  Statement as of 2:54 PM MST on January 8, 2009


... Winter Weather Advisory remains in effect from 6 PM this
evening to 5 am MST Friday...

A Winter Weather Advisory remains in effect from 6 PM this
evening to 5 am MST Friday.

The next storm system will move into the region this evening.
Expect colder air to move south back into the region as well this
evening as a Canadian cold front surges south. Snow will develop
behind the cold front and continue through tonight before
diminishing early Friday morning. New snow accumulations tonight
will range from 2 t0 4 inches on the plains to 4 to 7 inches in
the mountains. Additionally... north winds behind the cold front
will gust to near 30 mph at times... causing areas of blowing snow
and reduced visibilities. Falling temperatures behind the front
will combine with the windy conditions to produce wind chill
values below zero. In addition... area Road surfaces that are wet
from rain and melting snow will quickly re-freeze this evening
when the cold air arrives... creating icy conditions on roadways.

A Winter Weather Advisory for snow and blowing snow means that
visibilities will be limited due to a combination of falling and
blowing snow. Use caution when traveling... especially in open
areas.

For specific Road and travel conditions in Montana... dial 5 1 1.





 Record Report  Statement as of 11:34 PM EST on January 7, 2009

...Record High Precipitation For Jan 7 In North Central
&Nbsp;&Nbsp;&Nbsp;And Southwest Montana...


Location new record old record year set

Lewistown 0.31 0.27 1971



Personal Weather Stations

Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]

Location: Windy Acres, Great Falls, MT

Updated: 4:46 PM MST

Temperature: 40.6 °F Dew Point: 27 °F Humidity: 58% Wind: WSW at 9.6 mph Pressure: 25.90 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 35 °F Historical Graphs

Location: MesoWest Neil Creek MT US MCSCN, Belt, MT

Updated: 3:00 PM MST

Temperature: 47 °F Dew Point: 30 °F Humidity: 52% Wind: WSW at 18 mph Pressure: 29.47 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 40 °F Historical Graphs

MSN Maps of:

Temperature Dew Point Humidity Wind Pressure Hourly Precipitation -

NWS Forecaster Discussion




146 
fxus65 ktfx 082145 
afdtfx 


Area forecast discussion 
National Weather Service Great Falls Montana 
245 PM MST Thursday Jan 8 2009 


Short term (tonight through Friday night)... 


Complicated surface pattern across the region...slow moving boundary 
pushing to the east out of Blaine County as surface low moves along the 
Canadian/US border across northeast Montana...cold front pushing south 
across the border with 15 to 25 degree temperature drops in less 
than a half of an hour recorded in southern Alberta and at 
Sweetgrass just inside the border north of cutbank. Decent pressure 
gradient across the region will allow for the moderate wind to 
continue into the night. Precipitation will have moved out of Blaine 
County...will end the Ice Storm Warning. 


Cold front will continue to push into the forecast area early this 
evening and into tonight. Snow will develop mainly behind the front 
as multiple shortwaves will push across the forecast area. More of 
an impact will be felt across the northern half of the region...will 
continue the Winter Weather Advisory there for 2-5 inches of snow 
along with blowing and drifting expected with the northerly winds of 
15 to 25 miles per hour. Time height series and forecast soundings would 
suggest that a decent period of forcing and moisture will come 
together mainly between 00-09z across the area. Have bumped up probability of precipitation 
to categorical...near 90+ percent across the northern half...with 
likelies(60-70 percent) south outside of higher probability of precipitation in the higher 
elevations. Wind chills may approach -15 or -20 during the early 
morning hours Friday. 


Surface high will push into the region behind the system...ending most 
of the precipitation if not all by midday. Highs much cooler for Friday. 
Surface high pressure and west northwest flow will dominate the region 
into the weekend. Winds may increase slightly overnight Friday into 
Saturday with 15 to 20 and gusts to around 30 miles per hour across the 
northern Rocky Mountain front and around Great Falls and into the little 
belt mountain area. The winds may cause temperatures to slowly rise through the 
overnight due to the downslope warming. 


Long term (saturday through thursday) 


Saturday and Sunday...northwest flow will continue and a broad 
Pacific Ridge should keep temperatures relatively warm across 
central Montana. The exact position of the ridge will determine 
whether or not we see some effects of an Arctic air mass moving 
south from central Canada however. There is a possibility of light 
snow Sunday...mainly near the Rocky Mountains and higher 
elevations...as some moisture moves across the region from the 
northwest. 


Monday through Thursday...an upper level high pressure ridge over 
the eastern Pacific and West Coast will remain fairly stationary 
until moving east over the Pacific northwest on Wednesday. This will 
keep the local area underneath unsettled...northwest flow aloft. The 
airmass will be quite moist Monday as a shortwave moves through the 
flow aloft and...at the surface...high pressure over Saskatchewan 
and eastern Montana will bring upslope flow across the plains. 
Drying will begin by Monday night but improvement in the east will 
be slow. The gradual movement of the ridge east will keep most of 
the region free from higher chances of precipitation...the northeast 
zones will have the best chance for precipitation as they remain along the 
boundary between the colder air to the northeast. Temperatures will remain 
near normals through the period. Zelzer/db 


&& 


Aviation... 
an upper level low pressure trough is moving onto the West Coast. 
Moist flow ahead of this system will keep a chance of precipitation across 
the area. Best chance for precipitation will be over The Rockies...where 
MVFR ceilings are expected...the freezing rain should be diminishing 
across Blaine County early this afternoon. A coldfront will move 
across the Canadian border this evening and bring strong...gusty 
winds and snow across the plains. IFR ceilings and visibilities are expected 
near and behind the front. These conditions should prevail 
overnight...with improving conditions after sunrise on Friday. Db 


&& 


Preliminary point temps/pops... 
gtf 13 31 25 39 / 90 30 0 10 
ctb 4 29 22 34 / 90 10 0 20 
hln 24 37 20 39 / 90 20 0 10 
bzn 24 36 13 38 / 70 30 0 0 
wey 13 24 0 24 / 90 50 20 10 
dln 22 28 10 37 / 60 10 0 10 
hvr 0 21 12 34 / 90 20 0 0 
lwt 12 28 15 39 / 90 40 0 0 


&& 


Tfx watches/warnings/advisories... 
Winter Weather Advisory from 6 PM this evening to 5 am MST Friday 
for mtz009>013-044>051. 


Winter Storm Warning until 5 am MST Friday for mtz009-048. 


&& 


$$ 


Short term...schott 
long term...zelzer/db 
aviation...db 


Weather.Gov/greatfalls 










National Weather Service Glossary of Abbreviations

Non-Expanded Version (with abbreviations)

Powered by the Weather Underground, Inc.