textproduct: Goodland
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
- Freezing fog, perhaps localized dense freezing fog, is forecast along and west of a Dundy to Greeley county line this morning. Elevated surfaces and sidewalks may be slick from the fog, and any other precipitation that froze overnight. - Breezy to gusty winds Friday and Saturday with the strongest winds perhaps up to 50 mph on Saturday.
- Very low chances for snow Saturday across northern portions of the area.
SHORT TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/
Issued at 120 AM MST Thu Dec 4 2025
A period of subtle moisture advection coupled with an increase in 700mb dry air led to periods of freezing drizzle across the area during the early morning hours. We have just enough dry air advection in the 850-800mb layer that a subtle warm nose has formed leading to the freezing precipitation. 03Z RAP suggests any low level omega should end around 08Z thusly ending any precipitation potential. 285 and 290K isentropic analysis also suggests subsidence to be on the increase as well during this time. Patchy fog and freezing fog is also forecast primarily across western portions of the area, with the potential for localized dense fog as well. Any dense fog looks to be kept along and west of a Dundy to Greeley county line. Any fog potential looks to end around 12-14Z as winds become more southwesterly as a surface trough moves across the area. Stratus however is forecast to linger through the late afternoon hours making it a slow warm up for most.
As the trough continues to move through the area and clouds clear breezy winds are forecast to ensue sustained around 15-20 mph is forecast with gusts of 25-30 mph. Winds are forecast to be in the "furnace" wind direction which climatologically supports temperatures in the upper forecast echelon so have nudged temperatures up some. I wasn't as aggressive as I normally would be given the new snowfall potentially mitigating how warm we can get. Sunny skies are then forecast to ensue for the afternoon before some scattered to broken mid level clouds move in again for the evening and overnight hours.
Friday, surface troughing continues across the area. An increase in in 700-500mb moisture occurs as well. RAP cross sections show modest omega around 10-12 microbars in this layer as well but with dry air in the low levels virga is most likely to occur although some sprinkles or flurries may mix in. The NAM however has a deeper and moist profile but the forcing is I did nudge temperatures down a few degrees as well as most GEFS ensemble members keeps colder 850mb temperatures further west than deterministic guidance does. High temperatures for the day remain forecast in the low to mid 50s across the area. Breezy winds may also develop as well with the trough gusting to 25 mph.
Saturday, gusty to strong winds are forecast to develop as yet another clipper system moves across the northern Plains and a surface low developing across northwestern portions of the forecast area. 850mb winds are forecast to intensify as the low deepens with sustained winds of 25-35 mph and gusts up to 50 mph. The NAM has the low a little further north which would increase the magnitude of the winds whereas the GFS has is more over the area and broad which would lessen the winds some. Current forecast is tailored more towards the ECMWF which is a combo of the two with a bit of a more northern track but a broad low. Will also need to watch for some spotty rain or snow showers as well as some sporadic 700mb frontogenesis through the morning hours.
LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
Issued at 201 AM MST Thu Dec 4 2025
The long-term will be plagued with northwesterly flow allowing multiple shortwave troughs to move through the region. The first wave could move through around 18Z Monday to 6Z Tuesday and a second one within 24 hours. These shortwaves look to be fairly dry, so precipitation is not likely. However, if southerly 850 mb advection taps into more moist air, this could quickly change and will need to be monitored.
Our next big trough is looking to move into the area some time between Wednesday afternoon and Thursday noon. There is a better signal that precipitation will occur with this system as low-level moisture will have increased. Currently, PoPs are focused on the northwestern CWA, reaching about 20, while the northwestern 3/4 of the CWA is sitting around 10 PoPs. Depending on if the precipitation occurs overnight or during the day will decide if snow or rain will be the dominate P-type.
Sunday's high temperatures are a bit uncertain as the exiting trough will heavily influence them. NBM currently shows the eastern edges of the CWA remaining in the low to mid 30s while the western half of the CWA warms into the mid to upper 40s. If the trough exits faster, temperatures will be in the 40s across the area, but if it's slower or takes a more westerly path, cooler temperatures will spread westward. Beyond Sunday, temperatures are forecast to warm into the 50s while lows will generally cool into the 20s.
AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z FRIDAY/
Issued at 400 AM MST Thu Dec 4 2025
Stratus and localized freezing fog/drizzle; with the freezing fog/drizzle over the GLD terminal is forecast to continue. Current thinking is that the freezing fog/drizzle at GLD should end as drier air moves in from the northwest which should be to the terminal around 13Z or so as some visibility improvements have been seen upstream. Confidence isn't the highest in this as GLD has been the lowest visibility wise for the night even with a southwest wind. Ceilings for each terminal are forecast to improve through the morning. As soon as the stratus breaks and mixing ensues breezy winds gusting around 25 knots is forecast until the late afternoon/early evening as winds remain from the souht-southwest.
GLD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
KS...None. CO...None. NE...None.
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