Weather
Bismarck, North Dakota
National Weather Service: Winter Storm Warning
Current Conditions
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Almanac
Average High: 20°
Average Low: -1°
Record high/year: 63° (2002)
Record low/year: -42° (1887)
Sunrise: 8:27 AM
Sunset: 5:13 PM
Detailed History
Sun and Moon
Sunrise: 08:27 AM (CST)
Moon Rise: 02:18 PM (CST)
Sunset: 05:13 PM (CST)
Moon Set: 06:13 AM (CST)
Moon Phase
Next 12 Hours
Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database
5-Day Forecast
Forecast for Burleigh
Winter Storm Warning in effect until 6 PM CST Friday...
Rest of Today
Chance of snow late in the morning...then snow likely...a brief period of light freezing rain and light sleet possible in the afternoon. New snow and sleet accumulation of 1 to 2 inches. Highs 15 to 20. Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight
Snow. A period of light freezing rain possible south of the city with snow accumulation of 2 to 4 inches. Lows 15 to 20. Southeast winds 10 to 15 mph. Gusts up to 35 mph after midnight.
Friday
Cloudy. Snow likely in the morning...then chance of snow in the afternoon. Areas of blowing and drifting snow through the day. Windy. Snow accumulation around 1 inch. Total snow accumulation 4 to 8 inches. Temperatures falling into the mid single digits by afternoon. Northwest winds 15 to 30 mph increasing to 25 to 30 mph in the afternoon. Chance of snow 70 percent. Lowest wind chills around 20 below in the afternoon.
Friday Night
Mostly clear. Breezy...colder. Lows around 5 below. Northwest winds 15 to 25 mph becoming west around 10 mph after midnight.
Saturday
Mostly sunny. Highs 15 to 20. Southwest winds 5 to 15 mph.
Saturday Night
Mostly cloudy. Lows 5 to 10 above.
Sunday
Mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of snow. Highs around 20.
Sunday Night
Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of snow. Windy. Lows 5 to 10 above.
Monday and Monday Night
Mostly cloudy. Windy. Highs around 10. Lows around 10 below.
Tuesday
Partly sunny. Highs 5 to 10 above.
Tuesday Night
Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of snow. Lows around 10 below.
Wednesday
Mostly sunny. Highs 5 to 10 above.
Winter Storm Warning
Statement as of 10:43 am MST on January 8, 2009/
... Winter Storm Warning remains in effect until 6 PM CST /5 PM
MST/ Friday...
A Winter Storm Warning remains in effect until 6 PM CST /5 PM
MST/ Friday.
Snow will develop this afternoon and may be heavy at times
tonight through Friday. Expect 5 to 8 inches of snow accumulation.
A brief period of freezing rain is also possible this afternoon
and evening... however... the majority of the freezing rain will
remain in southwest North Dakota.
Strong north winds will develop Thursday night and Friday. The
winds will produce significant blowing and drifting snow.
Visibility will be greatly reduced in open country. The
combination of snow and blowing snow will make travel very
dangerous.
A Winter Storm Warning 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.
Public Information Statement
Statement as of 2:51 PM CST on January 8, 2009
... This is a public information statement... no travel advised in
Hettinger County...
The sheriff in Hettinger County has advised no travel due to
freezing rain and icy roads.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: NDDOT Bismarck I-94 Bridge, Bismarck, Wet/Treated Updated: 2:02 PM CST |
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| Temperature: 11 °F | Dew Point: 9 °F | Humidity: 88% | Wind: SE at 6 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 1 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: APRSWXNET Arnold ND US, Bismarck, ND Updated: 3:03 PM CST |
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| Temperature: 12 °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: East at 7 mph | Pressure: 29.59 in | Hourly Precipitation: 2.68 in | Windchill: 1 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: Rural North Bismarck, Harvest Grove Subdivsion, Bismarck, ND Updated: 3:20 PM CST |
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| Temperature: 10.2 °F | Dew Point: 6 °F | Humidity: 82% | Wind: East at 12.0 mph | Pressure: 29.77 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: -5 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: APRSWXNET Lincoln ND US, Bismarck, ND Updated: 3:02 PM CST |
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| Temperature: 56 °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: South at 6 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 14.35 in | Windchill: - | Historical Graphs |
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Location: APRSWXNET St. Anthony ND US, Saint Anthony, ND Updated: 2:00 PM MST |
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| Temperature: 11 °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: North at 18 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 30.91 in | Windchill: -7 °F | Historical Graphs |
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MSN Maps of: |
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| Temperature | Dew Point | Humidity | Wind | Pressure | Hourly Precipitation | - | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
936 fxus63 kbis 081711 afdbis Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Bismarck ND 1111 am CST Thursday Jan 8 2009 Update... What a mess...the previous forecast looks generally on track with amounts and timing...although the latest 12 UTC NAM does slow down the onset of precipitation. Have elected to slow precipitation down very slightly...though the NAM generally does not verify as good as the faster GFS/ECMWF. Have updated amounts with NCEP/HPC latest quantitative precipitation forecast and adjusted the band of heaviest snow to be just northeast of the 700 mb low...which passes just southwest of Bismarck in the 06 UTC GFS. Expect that amounts on the order of 5 to 8 inches will pass through Williston/Minot/Bismarck/Jamestown. Mixed precipitation really complicates this system. Dickinson reports snow and ice pellets...while the Painted Canyon is reporting accumulating ice. The echoes in Williston have yet to be verified as precipitation reaching the ground...but over a quarter inch of ice has been reported in northeast Montana. Expect up to a quarter inch of ice accumulation is possible...with southern McKenzie County being the most likely to receive higher amounts of ice. However...uncertainty is too great to upgrade current advisory to Winter Storm Warning or Ice Storm Warning. Will leave headlines as they are and adjust for higher amounts and mention 0.10 inch of ice accumulation possible. && Previous discussion... /issued 405 am CST Thursday Jan 8 2009/ Short term...today through Saturday night... lots of issues to contend with this morning with a complex storm on our doorstep. The strong baroclinic zone draped across the region will serve as the focus for a banded precipitation event worthy of warning criteria +sn...but exactly where is the question. The stubborn Arctic air is making it difficult to assume that the band will be all that far NE...especially in light of the 00z GFS/NAM which shift the greatest quantitative precipitation forecast back SW toward a kisn-kbis-kjms line. The 00z European model (ecmwf) is not much help in this regard as it maintains a solution reminiscent of its predecessors with the +sn from kisn-kmot-kdvl. Having said that...the breadth of the cold air combined with the trend seen even in the 03z sref and 06z NAM toward the 00z GFS/NAM solutions has given US confidence to trend toward the latter. Much of the forecast was build around the 00z GFS since it has a much better handle on the surface low dropping southeast today...deepening it more realistically than the NAM through 06z Thursday. In addition...its low level temperatures are colder...a scenario that has had merit for quite some time given the deep snow pack. Given all of this...we upgraded all of the watch to a Winter Storm Warning...and after much discussion went ahead and did the same for the bis/man area. We will change the freezing rain advzy in SW ND to a winter weather advzy and extend its time through 00z Sat in order to simplify the headlines. The Arctic outbreak methodology/check list agreed with an advzy in the SW. Low/middle level frontogenesis ramps up quickly through 00z as the entrance region of a 110kt+ jet streak moves into the region. The result is a strong area of q-vector convergence in the vicinity of the 850-700mb frontogenetical forcing. Cross sections even suggest some instability above that layer with some folds noted in the Theta sfcs around 00z. Looking at all of this from the perspective of the isentropic sfcs at 290/295k provides much the same story with 2-4 g/kg mixing ratios suggestive of 4-8 inches of snow per the Garcia method. There/S no question of forcing or moisture /with precipitable waters of 0.50 inches/ but again just where all of this sets up shop is somewhat troublesome. There will likely be a tight snow gradient along the thermal ribbon. Again...in trending toward the 00z GFS we have arrived with liquid amounts near 0.50 inches centered near kn60. Using an average 12:1 liquid/snow ration nets storm totals of 4-8 inches from kisn-kbis-kabr and north. Admittedly...unless the 00z European model (ecmwf) is correct our far NE County Warning Area may not meet warning criteria snow...but we did not choose to split hairs over this at 12+ hours from the event. The 700mb low tracks southeast through central ND tonight and to its right will lie the heaviest snow. Bufr soundings from the 00z GFS/NAM both suggest less risk of freezing rain from kisn-kbis than earlier thought. Warm layer temperatures only get to about 1 c...not sufficient for complete melting. There/S a different story from kdik-khei and SW though...where the layer near 850mb still gets to +2-4 c. Thus we moved the freezing rain threat a bit further SW...but still expect it to be a problem in areas. Forcing wanes Friday...but by then strong cold air advection begins on Stout nearly flow. 850mb temperatures fall to near -15 c on 30kt winds...and expect to mix a good part of this to the surface as nothing less than impressive pressure rises dump into wstrn ND. Note the 6 hour pressure rises of 15-20mb. Forecast soundings east of a kisn-kbis line only have about 25kts of wind to mix...so while we may not have to worry about true blizzard conditions...the deep snow and accumulation from tonight will make for sig blsn. This helped tip the scales toward issuing the warning in Burleigh/Morton counties. Long term...Sunday through Wednesday... GFS and European model (ecmwf) are in agreement in transitioning to a more meridional flow over the U.S. In the day 4-5 timeframe with an upper ridge in the eastern Pacific and a mean trough over the eastern U.S. This will bring another surge of Arctic air into the region on Monday. Models differ on the track of the clipper system moving through the area on Sunday that Ushers in the Arctic air. The GFS track is farther to the east than the European model (ecmwf). The GFS would bring more snow to the east...while the European model (ecmwf) solution would bring a better chance of snow to the west. Will compromise and broad brush chance probability of precipitation across the County Warning Area on Sunday into Sunday night. Made only minor adjustments to probability of precipitation Monday and Monday night. With Arctic air settling over the area...Don/T think there would be much in the way of any accumulating snow. The European model (ecmwf) is farther east with the Arctic high and does bring some warm advection snow into the far west Monday night...while GFS keeps warm air advection snows west of the County Warning Area. Current package does have slight chance probability of precipitation in the west so see no reason to mess with it now. Would probably have to add it back later if we did take it out. As far as temperatures are concerned...no changes were made to maximum temperatures on Sunday. Beyond this...we lowered temperatures significantly...especially north and east. Another problem will be winds on Sunday night through Monday evening. Strong gradient will be in place between the exiting clipper and the approaching Arctic high. Will likely need highlights for wind chills. Depending on the amount of snow with the clipper and all the snow already on the ground...could definitely see problems with blowing and drifting snow as well. And by the way...in the latter portions of the extended...do not see a big change. Cold air will remain over the region. Any warmup would likely be associated with some warm advection snows followed by a reinforcing shot of cold air. Aviation... low pressure will move southeast across the region through the forecast period...bringing a swath of snow from northwest to southeast. Will see MVFR-IFR ceilings spread southeast from Williston through Minot and Bismarck to Jamestown. Models have shunted the warm air intrusion farther south. Therefore will likely only bring freezing rain into the dik area...keeping snow over the remainder of the taf sites. && Bis watches/warnings/advisories... Winter Storm Warning until 6 PM CST /5 PM MST/ Friday for ndz018>020-034-035-047. Winter Weather Advisory until 5 PM MST Friday for ndz031>033-040- 041-043-044. Winter Weather Advisory until 6 PM CST /5 PM MST/ Friday for ndz042-045-046-050. Winter Storm Warning until 6 PM CST Friday for ndz001-009-017. Winter Storm Warning from 6 PM this evening to 6 PM CST Friday for ndz002>005-010>013-021>023-025-036-037-048-051. && $$ Cs/twh/scheck