textproduct: Grand Forks
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
- Scattered light snow showers may develop in the Red River Valley Sunday, and winds gusting up to 35 mph may bring patchy drifting and blowing snow impacts through the afternoon.
- 30% chance for at least 1" of snow area wide across 2 systems between Tuesday and Thursday. However uncertainty in the tracks leads to low confidence in the location and scale impacts.
UPDATE
Issued at 1130 AM CST Sun Feb 22 2026
Starting to see convective snow showers streaming southward through the RRV heading into midday. This, along with wind gusts ranging from 20-30 mph, will contribute to patchy blowing and drifting snow. Still looking at mainly sub-advisory impact potential; however, there could be a few spots where visibility could be briefly impacted.
UPDATE Issued at 550 AM CST Sun Feb 22 2026
Clouds continue to move down out of Canada this morning, and getting more reports of flurries. Still looking like there could be some HCRs later today, and already starting to get a few spots with 5-6 miles in haze for a short time. At this point think any impacts will be sub-advisory, but some minor drifting is possible. Still some variation on the exact track for Tuesday and Wednesday's shortwaves, although probabilities coming in a bit higher for at least an inch around Lake of the Woods for Tuesday.
..Synopsis
Weak upper flow will persist through the evening before the main branch of the subtropical jet inches north tonight to finally kicks this upper low out of the region. With this a weak shortwave currently noted in water vapor near Saskatoon will slide south through the NW flow across eastern North Dakota tonight bringing increased lift amid saturated low level profiles, increasing chances for some light snow. Along with this is also some weak pressure advection in the morning and a tightened pressure gradient in the afternoon which may drive HCR development with gusts topping 30 mph in the afternoon. A few clipper type waves then look to move through Tuesday and Wednesday but ensembles still show a large variance in the timing and tracks decreasing confidence in impacts.
- Today/Tomorrow
While skies are currently mostly clear the incoming wave should provide support for increasing stratus tonight with the 850-700mb layer largely saturated across the area and some weak isentropic ascent potentially enough to force out some light snow tomorrow. Combine this with a favorably steep boundary layer and 925mb winds nearing 30kts particularly in the Valley and east and it could be a sneaky HCR day with low end blowing/drifting snow impacts as the current snowpack remains extremely blowable.
Hitting Cold Weather Advisory criteria is also looking less likely with a 40% chance from Roseau south to Thief and west across areas north of HWY 2 tonight. Not that it wont still be chilly with Sunday morning wind chills in the -20 to -25 range but not quite advisory worthy. Cold again Monday morning with lows in the minus teens for more northern areas but lighter winds with shortwave ridging overhead will lead to wind chills again only in the -20 to -25 range.
- Tuesday to Thursday
Looking at individual ensemble stamps there is still the signal for the initial Tuesday wave to bring a relatively narrow swath of 1-3" somewhere likely favoring areas north of HWY 2 with the following wave more in T-2" range favoring areas south of HWY 200. So overall moderate chances for at least some snowfall across most of the area over the days 3-5 period but accumulations for any given location would be unlikely to exceed 2-3" at the max. Thus confidence in impacts remains low given the mixed bag of potential tracks currently.
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/
Issued at 1130 AM CST Sun Feb 22 2026
VFR ceilings prevail at KDVL, with MVFR to IFR conditions at all other TAF sites. IFR conditions will likely be in response to brief, convective snow showers streaming southward in the vicinity of KGFK, KFAR, and KTVF. Cloud cover increases in coverage late this evening and overnight, bringing another chance for IFR ceilings. Wind gusts this afternoon are expected to reach upwards of 25 knots before diminishing during the early evening. Look for light and variable winds for most sites overnight into Monday morning.
FGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
ND...None. MN...None.
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