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Office: FSD
FXUS63 KFSD 042338
AFDFSD

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Sioux Falls SD
538 PM CST Thu Dec 4 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Light snow is likely mainly north of I-90 late tonight into
  tomorrow morning, but accumulations are expected to be light.
  Light freezing rain (along with some sleet) looks to mix in
  when precipitation begins, with a light glaze possible along
  the Highway-14 corridor in central South Dakota mainly on
  elevated surfaces and untreated roads.

- Confidence is increasing in the potential for accumulating
  snowfall Saturday into Saturday night. There is a medium-to-
  high chance (40-70%) of at least 3 inches of snow, especially
  over portions of southeast South Dakota, northwest Iowa, and
  southwest Minnesota.

- Cold, below normal temperatures are expected to continue
  through the weekend, with signs of temperatures moderating
  closer to normal next week.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 256 PM CST Thu Dec 4 2025

It was either a bitterly cold Thursday through and
through or a fairly decent December day depending on which side of
the stratus you ended up on. Where skies cleared early like in
central South Dakota, we've managed to make it to around 30 degrees
and even as mild as the low-40s! Where stratus lingered most of the
day like for areas east of the James River, we've only made it to
the teens for the most part. A milder night is ahead compared to
last night though, with temperatures dropping into the lower 10s
to middle 20s by sunrise Friday morning.

An active upper-level pattern will send a couple of waves through
the area this weekend. The first wave will bring a chance of mainly
light snow with some mixed precipitation, starting along the Highway-
14 corridor in central South Dakota and spreading eastward through
the morning, but mostly staying along and north of I-90 through the
day. Soundings indicate a warm nose around 900 mb during the onset
of precipitation, and with below freezing surface temperatures, we
will likely see some freezing rain mix in whenever precipitation
starts, along with some sleet as well. Not expecting much in the way
of ice accumulations, but can't rule out a light glaze mainly on
elevated surfaces and untreated roads along the Highway-14 corridor
in South Dakota. As the warm layer diminishes with time, snow
will become the dominant precipitation type, though snow is
expected to remain light. We'll see a dusting to a tenth or two
of an inch of snow, highest amounts over the Highway-14 corridor
in southwest Minnesota. Highs on Friday look to be in the 30s
across the area.

A stronger system will take shape on Saturday as another upper-level
wave moves in from the northern Rockies into the central Plains,
with a surface low developing over Wyoming in response. That surface
low looks to dive southeastward into central Nebraska, putting
us on the snowy side of the system. A band of snow looks to
develop in response to WAA at 850 mb, starting in central South
Dakota Saturday morning and spreading east-southeastward
throughout the day. Snow looks to exit off to our southeast into
central Iowa by the late evening. Snowfall rates could be
moderate to locally heavy at times, and this will likely lead
to a few inches of snow across much of the area, especially from
southeastern South Dakota into northwest Iowa and southwest
Minnesota. In those areas the NBM probabilities of at least 3
inches of snow ranges from 40-70%, while the probability of at
least 6 inches is around 10-30%. Winds don't look to be too
strong with this system, but another messy travel day is growing
increasingly likely for Saturday, so keep up to date with the
latest forecast!

Colder air will move in after Saturday's system, with lows dropping
to the single digits on either side of zero by Sunday morning.
Sunday will be cold with highs in the single digits to teens and
lows Sunday night once again in the single digits on either side of
zero. Our next best chance of precipitation looks to be around the
Tuesday-Wednesday time frame, though it is too far out to determine
specifics. At this point, temperatures look to be a little warmer
(or at least, closer to normal) by then, so the system may
bring us rain to start with a changeover to snow on the backside
of the system.

&&

.AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/...
Issued at 538 PM CST Thu Dec 4 2025

Latest satellite imagery shows two areas of stratus. One is along
and east of I-29 with ceilings down to MVFR/IFR levels and the other
is just beginning to push into the area from the northwest as it
sitting at VFR thresholds. The MVFR/IFR stratus will continue to
push eastwards through the evening hours while winds turn
southwesterly. Some low level wind shear (LLWS) is expected at KSUX
for a few hours this evening as well. A warm front will push through
the area tonight, turning winds to out of the west in its wake. This
front will also bring mixed precipitation chances tonight through
tomorrow morning for locations along and north of highway-18. Mainly
dry conditions and weakening northwest winds will finish out the
afternoon hours tomorrow.

&&

.FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
SD...None.
MN...None.
IA...None.
NE...None.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Samet
AVIATION...Meyers



Office: UNR FXUS63 KUNR 042234 AFDUNR Area Forecast Discussion For Western SD and Northeastern WY National Weather Service Rapid City SD 334 PM MST Thu Dec 4 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Light snow returns tonight into Friday, with another chance on Saturday into Sunday. - Warmer and breezy conditions early next week. && .DISCUSSION...(This Evening Through Thursday) Issued at 127 PM MST Thu Dec 4 2025 An upper air analysis shows northwest flow continues over the northern plains today, with a weak disturbance over eastern MT. Surface chart depicts low pressure over western SD, with warm frontal boundary now through the forecast area, towards central SD. Temperatures currently sit in the mid 30s to low 40s, with light to breezy westerly winds. Clouds will increase this evening ahead of the next wave as it drops down from eastern MT. Light precipitation arrives tonight, late enough that it should remain as snow. Expect little to no accumulations with this wave, however upslope over the northern Black Hills will bring minor accumulations of 1-3 inches. Light precipitation will taper off Friday morning, with dry conditions expected the latter half of the day, and similar temperatures to today. Another disturbance moves in late Friday and associated cold front will drop down from MT/SD. Expect a slight decrease in temperatures for Saturday, and another chance for light precipitation during the day into Sunday morning. Some areas in the western SD plains could see 1-2 inches, with the higher elevation Black Hills perhaps seeing slightly higher amounts. Unsettled pattern will bring more chances for light precipitation early next week, however low-level warmer air moving in will bring mild (but breezy) days for Monday and Tuesday, with highs for some areas climbing into the 50s. && .AVIATION...(For the 00Z TAFS Through 00Z Friday Evening) Issued At 332 PM MST Thu Dec 4 2025 An incoming system will bring light snow to northern and western portions of the area around 03Z tonight. Increasing MVFR/IFR conditions are expected, especially across northeast Wyoming, the Black Hills, and through northwest South Dakota overnight into Friday morning. && .UNR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... SD...None. WY...None. && $$ DISCUSSION/KEY MESSAGES...Dye AVIATION...Wong
Office: ABR FXUS63 KABR 042353 AFDABR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Aberdeen SD 553 PM CST Thu Dec 4 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Downslope winds expected from Sisseton south to Brandt this afternoon, with gusts from 40-50 mph. This will create areas of blowing/drifting snow with localized areas of reduced visibilities down to a mile at times. - System late tonight into Friday bringing generally around an inch or less of light snow. Areas in south central SD could see freezing rain to a wintry mix of precipitation tonight, which could cause a light glaze on surfaces Friday morning. - Snow chances (50-70%) return Saturday as a clipper system moves through, producing a dusting of snow to the north and an inch or two of snow south of US-212. There will be periodic lower chances for snow (20-40%) through early next week, as more weak weather systems have the potential to move through the region. && .SHORT TERM /THIS EVENING THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/... Issued at 212 PM CST Thu Dec 4 2025 As of 20z, strong downsloping winds are gusting along the eastern side of the Prairie Coteau. This is leading to wind gust observations of 40-50 mph in areas, as well as drifting and patchy blowing snow locally reducing visibilities down to a mile or less at times. These strong winds will continue to stay strong into the evening before weakening again. Tonight, a small clipper will move into central and northeastern SD from ND. This clipper will mostly bring light snow flurries for north central SD tonight and for northeastern SD late tonight through Friday morning. There is a bit of warmer air aloft, and this should cool below freezing for most areas before precipitation starts to fall. However, south central SD could stay warmer aloft for longer causing the snow to melt as it falls before it reaches the surface. Since surface temperatures will be around/below freezing, this melted snow could freeze as it reaches the ground leading to freezing rain or a wintry mix of precipitation. It is possible for a light glaze of ice to form in a line from the Pierre and Redfield areas and to the south. Snowfall amounts look to be an inch or less, higher amounts in northeastern SD. Temperatures will continue be warmer than previous days with tomorrow forecast to have highs in the upper 20s to mid 30s. At the same time, wind chills will stay above 0, with most areas getting into the teens to lower 20s tonight and tomorrow. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... Issued at 212 PM CST Thu Dec 4 2025 General theme for the long term part of the forecast is northwesterly flow aloft leading to clipper systems moving through the region every 18-24hrs. This will bring periods of light snow with the clippers and variable temperatures (warming in front of and colder behind). All in all, the lighter snow should only lead to minor impacts as accumulations will generally be a light dusting to an inch or two at the most (primarily on Fri night into Saturday in central SD). The greatest uncertainty with these clipper systems comes with the amounts and location of the greatest snowfall for the Friday night into Saturday system. The uncertainty has been there for the last several days, largely with the track of the surface low and the intensity of the Canadian high to the north. It does seem like we're seeing more consistency now with the low tracking from central MT on Friday night to central NE by Saturday afternoon. This will lead to snow occurring on the north-northeast side of the low and tied to the 850-700mb warm air advection and FGen forcing. The swath of snow is expected to stretch southeast across central SD and into southeast SD, but the exact track is still a little uncertain. The latest in the ensemble snowfall amounts highlight a dusting (10-25th percentile) to over 3" (90-95th percentile) for the Mobridge/Pierre/Faulkton area and then lesser amounts as you head farther to the northeast. The trend does continue to point towards the greatest amounts being to the south of our forecast area on Saturday, as the forcing intensifies in southeast SD. Will need to continue to fine-tune this forecast over the next day. Behind that clipper, high pressure builds in for Saturday night into Sunday morning before the next clipper, but this looks to be drier and struggles as it runs into the high over central SD. The next potential clipper for Sunday night into Monday looks to be farther north (more of a eastern ND and northern MN snow), before the next one on Tues night into Wed (this one is a little farther south and does bring some snow potential to northeast SD and rain/snow to central SD). As mentioned above, these clippers appear to be lighter on snow than Saturday and only expect a light dusting. Fortunately, with the snow on the ground, no significant winds expected at this time (limiting blowing snow), although probabilities of 34kt or greater do increase to above 50% for Tues/Wed next week with that clipper. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 553 PM CST Thu Dec 4 2025 Terminals KABR,KATY,KPIR,KMBG VFR conditions start the period, as ATY just went to SCT instead of BKN008. These lower clouds may only temporarily return through 02Z. A surface trough pushing through the Dakotas will bring light precipitation with it. 3-5 hours of light snow will be possible at most locations overnight into Friday morning with IFR to LIFR ceilings. Given the slightly warmer conditions and the cold ground at PIR, 3 hours of -FZRA is possible. Confidence is lower at PIR, so the -FZRA has only been included at a TEMPO basis for now. IFR to LIFR ceilings look to stick around longest at ATY, from 11Z Friday until 00Z Saturday. && .ABR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... SD...None. MN...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...Vipond LONG TERM...SRF AVIATION...06