Advisory Archive

11 / 13 / 24  <<  
 
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Yesterday an additional 8 inches of dense snow fell in the Bridger Range; 4-6 inches fell near Hyalite, Big Sky and Cooke City; and 2-3 inches fell near West Yellowstone. This morning temperatures were in the high teens and low 20s F with winds blowing 10-15 mph from the west and gusting 20-30 mph. Today temperatures may drop a few degrees and winds will ease just a little shifting to the WNW.  Snowfall will end around midday with 1-3 inches accumulating in most areas. By late afternoon a few rays of sunshine may break through the clouds making way for more sunshine this weekend.

Since yesterday morning 15 inches of snow fell in Hyalite Canyon, 10-12 inches near Bridger Bowl, 8-9 inches near Big Sky and Cooke City, and 2-6 inches near West Yellowstone. Westerly winds have been averaging 20 mph and gusting to 40-50 mph. This morning temperatures were in the high teens F and should rise to the low 20s F today. Winds will remain westerly and ease slightly, blowing 15 mph with gusts of 30-35 mph. Snowfall will continue today.  By tomorrow morning most areas will get an additional 3-6 inches. The mountains near West Yellowstone will receive 2-3 inches.

Yesterday’s storm dropped 22 inches in the Bridger Range. They just picked up another five inches this morning while the rest of our advisory area received 2-4 inches. Unsettled weather will continue to bring snow, but the real change is the wind. Relatively calm winds yesterday are no longer. Westerly winds are currently averaging 20-30 mph with gusts hitting 45 mph. These will continue today before tapering tonight. Mountain temperatures are near 10F this morning and will warm into the low 20s. By early tomorrow I expect an additional 3-6 inches.

Cough, cough.  Call in sick today and head up to Bridger Bowl, and don’t forget your snorkel. The range is under a strong, moist, northwest flow and the Bridger Bowl Cloud is in full effect. At 6 a.m. it has snowed 18 inches in five hours! It’s anyone’s guess how long it will last, but the models show good energy and moisture into this afternoon. Click here for the latest snowfall amounts. The rest of our forecast area has 1-3 inches of new snow. Winds are averaging 15-20 mph out of the west with gusts of 25 mph. Mountain temperatures dropped last night into the single digits. This week looks to be snowy, a welcome relief to our powder drought. By tomorrow morning I expect 4-6 inches in most areas with the Bridger Range getting another foot or two.

Since yesterday morning 6-8 inches of snow fell in the mountains around West Yellowstone and Big Sky including the northern Gallatin Range.  The mountains around Cooke City picked up 4-5 inches while the Bridger Range squeezed out 3 inches.  Today, snow showers will linger but accumulations will be less than an inch.  Currently, temperatures are ranging from the single digits to low teens F and winds are light out WNW blowing 5-15 mph.  Today, temperatures will warm into the upper teens to low twenties F and winds will stay light to moderate out of the WNW.  A stronger storm system will move into southwest Montana late tonight and last through tomorrow.  Accumulations upward of a foot are possible by Wednesday morning.

Over the past 24 hours 2-3 inches of snow fell in the mountains around West Yellowstone and Cooke City.  A trace to one inch fell in the mountains around Bozeman and Big Sky.  These numbers will increase today as moisture arrives on a southwest flow. By this evening, an additional 3-5 inches will accumulate in the southern mountains and 2-4 inches will fall in the north.

This morning temperatures are in the 20s F and winds are blowing 5-15 mph from the WSW.  Today, temperatures will climb into the upper 20s to low 30s under snowy skies and winds will continue to blow 10-20 from the WSW.  Snow will taper off this evening and temperatures will drop to around 10 degrees F.  Another potent storm is scheduled to arrive Monday night into Tuesday.

Overnight 1-2 inches of snow fell in the mountains around Bozeman, Big Sky and Cooke City.  The southern Madison Range and mountains around West Yellowstone picked up 2-3 inches.  Morning temperatures are in the mid to upper 20s F and winds are blowing 15-25 from the WSW with gusts reaching upward of 30 mph. Today, light snow is likely in the mountains with an additional 1-2 inches possible by this afternoon.  Mountain temperatures will warm into the upper 20s to low 30s F and winds will continue to blow 15-25 from the WSW.  A stronger storm system will impact our area starting tonight and should deliver 3-5 inches by tomorrow afternoon.

Yesterday the mountains near Cooke City received 5 inches of snow and the mountains south of West Yellowstone received 3 inches while all other areas received a trace. This morning temperatures were in the low 20s F and winds were blowing 10-15 mph from the W and SW with gusts of 25 mph. Today temperatures will rise into the low 30s F. Wind speeds will remain the same but wind directions should shift more to the S and SW. Clouds will build late this afternoon and tonight a little more snow should fall. Mountains near Bozeman and Big Sky may get an inch of snow with more possible further south.

This morning mountain temperatures were in the high 20s and low 30s F. Winds increased yesterday afternoon. This morning they were averaging 20 mph with gusts of 30-40 mph from the SW. No snow fell overnight but a little snow was just starting to fall this morning. Don’t get too excited because only an inch or two will accumulate today. Temperatures will drop a little by afternoon and winds will blow 15 mph gusting to 30 mph from the W.

Under partly cloudy skies there’s no new snow to report. Mountain temperatures are in the low thirties around Bozeman and Big Sky and mid-twenties near Cooke City and West Yellowstone. Currently, west to southwest winds are blowing 10-25 mph at the ridgetops. Clouds will increase later today with some flurries expected after midnight as winds increase to 30 mph and mountain temperatures cool into the twenties. By morning we’ll see a trace to one inch of snow, if we’re lucky.