textproduct: Bismarck
This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.
KEY MESSAGES
- Windy today into this evening. Then very windy Thursday through Friday.
- Well above average temperatures will generally continue through the middle of the week, with highs Wednesday more seasonable in the east. - Light rain/snow chances return late this afternoon/evening with higher chances Thursday evening through Friday morning. The highest chances (60 to 80 percent) are along and east of Highway 83.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 328 AM CST Tue Jan 13 2026
The primary forecast challenges for this period are winds, light precipitation, and temperatures. First, gusty winds are expected today before diminishing from northwest to southeast this evening and through the night. Even stronger winds are then expected Thursday, through Thursday night, and into Friday morning. In addition to winds, multiple rounds of light precipitation are possible, including rain in the southwest this morning and early afternoon. Light snow, maybe with some rain mixed in late this afternoon and evening mainly in central ND. The next best potential for accumulating snow is then late Thursday afternoon through Friday morning, with the highest chances along and east of Highway 83.
In regard to winds today, surface low pressure will propagate from central Manitoba towards southern Ontario, or the northern Great Lakes Region. Along with strong high pressure over the western CONUS, this will tighten the pressure gradient helping to drive gusty northwesterly winds. However, there is no obvious strong CAA nor pressure rises during the day today. The best pressure rises pass through this evening mainly over north central and eastern ND. Without being during the best mixing hours and with a lack of strong CAA, feel winds will generally remain below advisory criteria. However, localized stronger gusts aren't entirely out of the question.
Very strong winds are then likely Thursday through Thursday night before gradually diminishing throughout the day Friday. There remains some uncertainty as to how these winds will play out. EFI values have increased since last night (though remain similar to yesterday afternoon) resulting in increasing confidence in solid advisory level winds, with the potential for high winds. However, limited deterministic guidance produces marginal pressure rises during the day Thursday. And as of now, the pressure bubble passing through Thursday night and Friday morning isn't terribly impressive and generally doesn't align with the best CAA. That said, deterministic runs are very limited, so will continue to trust ensemble guidance and raise wind gust messaging, including in the HWO, to 55 mph for Thursday through Friday morning.
In regard to precipitation chances, seemingly forced by the left exit region of a jetstreak, light rain is likely mainly in the southwest this morning and possibly into the afternoon. For the most part, total rain should be a couple hundredths or less. However, up to a tenth of an inch isn't out of the question in the far southwest. There could also be some light snow, possibly with rain mixed in early, late this afternoon and evening in central ND. Little to no accumulations are expected.
With the aforementioned windier system to finish out the workweek, snow chances remain possible mainly along and east of Highway 83 Thursday evening through Friday morning. Currently, not a lot of moisture is progged with this system, but it is the next best chance for accumulating snow. While total snow seems limited, there could be periods of significant visibility reduction while snow is falling due to the very strong winds presently forecast.
Finally, temperatures remain well above average through Thursday, though eastern ND will be closer to average Wednesday. Confidence in regard to temperatures Friday is fairly high with the return to more seasonable conditions. However, the remainder of the forecast period beyond that remains a crapshoot. A ridge over the west CONUS looks to amplify beyond what it currently is thus putting most of the region into northerly flow aloft. However, just how far west the eastern extent of the ridge is pushed will determine just how cool things become and the duration of any cooler temperatures. Nevertheless, NBM ensemble 25th/75th percentile spreads remain extremely large, especially for central ND where Bismarck's spread for a high on Saturday is from 8 to 37 degrees. Spreads further east and west are closer to 20 degrees, with eastern temperatures progged to be lower overall, and western (especially southwestern) warmer overall.
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z WEDNESDAY/
Issued at 1149 PM CST Mon Jan 12 2026
LLWS is present across most of the state, though should diminish as winds pick up during the overnight hours. Otherwise, expect gusty northwesterly winds through most of the period, though they should begin to diminish from northwest to southeast Tuesday evening. MVFR ceilings are possible in northeastern ND Tuesday morning and are expected to expand south and west across the state through the day. For the most part, these are expected to remain MVFR, though could become IFR, especially over parts of the northwest and north central late Tuesday afternoon and evening.
BIS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
IMPORTANT This is an independent project and has no affiliation with the National Weather Service or any other agency. Do not rely on this website for emergency or critical information: please visit weather.gov for the most accurate and up-to-date information available.
textproduct.us is built and maintained by Joshua Thayer.