RSS feed source: US National Weather Service

…FIRE WEATHER WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM TUESDAY MORNING THROUGH TUESDAY EVENING FOR STRONG AND GUSTY WINDS, LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY, AND HIGH FIRE DANGER FOR FIRE WEATHER ZONES; EASTERN 151, ALL OF 152 AND 153, AND EASTERN 154… * AFFECTED AREA…Fire Weather Zones 151, 152, 153 and 154. * TIMING…For the first Fire Weather Watch, from Monday afternoon through Monday evening. For the second Fire Weather Watch, from Tuesday morning through Tuesday evening. * WINDS…Southwest 20 to 30 mph with gusts up to 45 mph. * RELATIVE HUMIDITY…As low as 7 percent. * IMPACTS…Any fires that develop or are ongoing will have the potential to spread rapidly.

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RSS feed source: US National Weather Service

* AFFECTED AREA…Fire Weather Zone 150. * TIMING…From Tuesday morning through Tuesday evening. * WINDS…Southwest 15 to 25 mph with gusts up to 40 mph. * RELATIVE HUMIDITY…As low as 9 percent. * IMPACTS…Any fires that develop or are ongoing will have the potential to spread rapidly.

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RSS feed source: US National Weather Service

…FIRE WEATHER WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM TUESDAY MORNING THROUGH TUESDAY EVENING FOR STRONG AND GUSTY WINDS, LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY, AND HIGH FIRE DANGER FOR FIRE WEATHER ZONES; EASTERN 151, ALL OF 152 AND 153, AND EASTERN 154… * AFFECTED AREA…Fire Weather Zones 151, 152, 153 and 154. * TIMING…For the first Fire Weather Watch, from Monday afternoon through Monday evening. For the second Fire Weather Watch, from Tuesday morning through Tuesday evening. * WINDS…Southwest 20 to 30 mph with gusts up to 45 mph. * RELATIVE HUMIDITY…As low as 7 percent. * IMPACTS…Any fires that develop or are ongoing will have the potential to spread rapidly.

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RSS feed source: US National Weather Service

ESFTFX Despite cooler temperatures expected this week, the recent string of warm daytime and mild overnight temperatures has spurred an increase in high elevation snowmelt, resulting in within bank rises on some creeks and upper tributary rivers near the mountains. Scattered precipitation through Monday may add to some localized runoff but widespread precipitation expected to develop across primarily central and southwest Montana Tuesday and Wednesday is likely to fall as snow at elevations where a lingering snowpack exists. Significant rises are not expected on larger rivers, but some creeks and small rivers in the mountains and adjacent foothills may reach bankful early this week and remain elevated. Some locations that are

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