274  
FXUS65 KABQ 222327 AAA  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
527 PM MDT TUE JUL 22 2025  
   
..NEW AVIATION  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
UPDATED AT 527 PM MDT TUE JUL 22 2025  
 
- NUMEROUS SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL DEVELOP TODAY WITH  
HEAVY RAINFALL, GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS, SMALL HAIL AND FREQUENT  
LIGHTNING. AREAS OF FLASH FLOODING MAY OCCUR, ESPECIALLY WITHIN  
AND DOWNSTREAM OF BURN SCARS, POOR DRAINAGE AND URBAN AREAS.  
 
- SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM COVERAGE WILL DECREASE SLIGHTLY  
WEDNESDAY, AND THEN MORESO THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. THE POTENTIAL  
FOR HEAVY RAINFALL WILL DECREASE A LITTLE MORE EACH DAY AS WELL.  
 
- MODERATE HEAT RISK WILL RETURN TO THE LOWER ELEVATIONS OF  
NORTHWEST NEW MEXICO, THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY, AND PORTIONS OF THE  
EASTERN PLAINS SATURDAY THROUGH MONDAY WHERE HIGHS CLIMB INTO  
THE MID 90S TO NEAR 100 DEGREES.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(THIS EVENING THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 151 PM MDT TUE JUL 22 2025  
 
NEW MEXICO LIES IN BETWEEN A CLOSED LOW OVER THE TX PANHANDLE AND AN  
UPPER LOW OVER SOUTHERN CA. A PLUME OF MONSOONAL MOISTURE IS BEING  
ADVECTED IN BETWEEN THE TWO FEATURES, ALTHOUGH FLOW ALOFT IS QUITE  
LIGHT OVER NEW MEXICO ITSELF. STORMS HAVE RAPIDLY DEVELOPED OVER THE  
HIGH TERRAIN OF SOUTHWEST AND NORTHERN NM WITHIN THE PAST COUPLE OF  
HOURS THANKS TO THE CLEARING OF HIGH CLOUDS WHICH HAS ALLOWED FOR  
DESTABILIZATION TO OCCUR. INSTABILITY IS NOT WILDLY IMPRESSIVE (300-  
800 J/KG OF MU CAPE), BUT THE HIGH MOISTURE CONTENT IN THE  
ATMOSPHERE WILL MAKE UP FOR THE LACK OF CAPE. THE 18Z SOUNDING AT  
KABQ HAD A PWAT OF 1.08". THIS IS SLIGHTLY LESS THAN SATELLITE  
DERIVED PWATS WOULD SUGGEST, BUT IS STILL ABOVE THE 90TH PERCENTILE  
FOR CLIMATOLOGY. MID-LEVEL TEMPERATURES HAVE WARMED SOMEWHAT  
SIGNIFICANTLY FROM YESTERDAY AS WELL, WITH 700-500MB LAPSE RATES  
DECREASING FROM 7.4C/KM TO 6.3C/KM. THERE IS MORE LIFT IN TODAY'S  
ATMOSPHERE THOUGH AND THAT WILL HELP TO DRIVE MUCH OF THIS  
AFTERNOON'S CONVECTION. HI-RES MODELS HAVE BEEN CONSISTENTLY SHOWING  
A WEAK UPPER-LOW LIFTING NORTHWARD ALONG THE RGV THIS EVENING,  
RESULTING IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A CLUSTER OF STORMS IN THE TRIANGLE  
FROM ALBUQUERQUE TO SANTA FE TO SANTA ROSA. PERSISTENT MODERATE TO  
LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL RATES, ENHANCED BY THE TERRAIN, WILL ELEVATE  
THE RISK OF FLASH FLOODING IN THIS AREA. HREF 90TH PERCENTILE  
RAINFALL TOTALS SHOW POCKETS OF 1-3" IN THIS AREA, WITH A HIGH-END  
SCENARIO SHOWING UPWARDS OF 4". THE THREAT OF FLASH FLOODING IN THE  
ALBUQUERQUE AND SANTA FE METRO AREAS WILL BE GREATEST FROM 5PM TO  
9PM AS STORMS CONTINUOUSLY REGENERATE ALONG OUTFLOW BOUNDARIES.  
SHOWERS AND EMBEDDED STORMS ASSOCIATED WITH THE UPPER-LOW IN CENTRAL  
NM COULD PERSIST EVEN LATER, WITH WEAKER INTENSITY.  
 
THIS UPPER-LOW FEATURE WILL SLOWLY MOVE INTO EASTERN NM BY THE TIME  
OF CONVECTIVE INITIATION ON WEDNESDAY. THERE WILL BE SOME DRY AIR  
ADVECTION AND SUBSIDENCE IN ITS WAKE, RESULTING IN A DOWNTREND IN  
STORM CHANCES TOMORROW. STORMS WILL BE MOST WIDESPREAD IN THE  
SOUTHWEST AND NORTHEASTERN PORTIONS OF THE STATE AND THE UPTICK IN  
SHEAR IN THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE STATE MAY BE SUFFICIENT FOR THE  
DEVELOPMENT OF A FEW STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS AS THEY ROLL OFF THE  
SANGRE DE CRISTO MOUNTAINS AND MOVE INTO THE PLAINS. HI-RES MODELS  
AND THE NAM SHOW STORMS TRYING TO COALESCE INTO A LINE AS THIS  
OCCURS, BUT SHOW RAPID DISSIPATION AS IT BECOMES DISPLACED FROM THE  
DEPARTING UPPER-LOW. THIS SEEMS UNLIKELY GIVEN THE MOIST SOUTH TO  
SOUTHEAST FLOW AT THE SFC SO POPS WERE INCREASED IN THE EASTERN  
PLAINS FOR TOMORROW EVENING/NIGHT. WHILE THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN  
WILL ONCE AGAIN SERVE AS AN INITIATION POINT FOR STORMS, THE  
WESTERLY STEERING FLOW SHOULD HELP TO LIMIT THEIR RESIDENCE TIME  
OVER THE RUIDOSO AREA AND HPCC BURN SCARS. A FLASH FLOOD WATCH WAS  
NOT YET ISSUED FOR WEDNESDAY, ALTHOUGH COULD BE ADDED IN TONIGHT'S  
FORECAST PACKAGE, DEPENDING ON HOW TODAY'S RAINFALL IMPACTS THE  
OUTLOOK FOR TOMORROW.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY)  
ISSUED AT 151 PM MDT TUE JUL 22 2025  
 
THE CLEAR DRYING TREND WILL CONTINUE LATE WEEK AS AN UPPER LOW MOVES  
OVER THE GREAT BASIN AND PUSHES DRY AIR INTO WESTERN NM. THERE  
SHOULD BE ENOUGH REMNANT MOISTURE ACROSS EASTERN NM FOR A FEW  
STORMS, BUT CONVECTION WILL BE VERY ISOLATED. WESTERLY FLOW ALOFT  
WILL HELP TO TAKE ANY STORMS OVER THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS EAST AND  
KEEP THEM OFF OF THE BURN SCARS, RESULTING IN A LOW FLASH FLOOD RISK  
FOR THE RUIDOSO AREA THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY. THE DRIER AIRMASS  
WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY HOTTER TEMPERATURES THAT WILL CREATE MODERATE  
HEAT RISK ALONG THE MIDDLE RIO GRANDE VALLEY AND IN THE SOUTHEAST  
PLAINS WHERE HIGHS WILL THREATEN 100F. SATURDAY AND SUNDAY WILL BE  
OF GREATEST CONCERN, CONSIDERING THAT MANY WILL LIKELY BE OUTDOORS  
RECREATING AND ENJOYING THE BREAK IN STORMS.  
 
MOISTURE WILL RETURN FROM THE SOUTHEAST ON SUNDAY SINCE THE DOME OF  
HIGH PRESSURE OVER THE CENTRAL PLAINS WILL BEGIN TO SHIFT WESTWARD,  
DRAWING GULF MOISTURE UP INTO EASTERN NM. AN INVERTED TROUGH  
EMBEDDED WITHIN THE SOUTHEASTERLY FLOW COULD HELP TO FURTHER  
ENHANCE PRECIPITATION. SCATTERED STORMS SUNDAY WILL BECOME MORE  
WIDESPREAD EARLY MONDAY AND TUESDAY AS GEFS AND ENS MEAN PWATS  
INCREASE TO 100-120% OF NORMAL. LATE JULY/EARLY AUGUST TENDS TO BE  
THE PEAK OF THE MONSOON SEASON WHEN PWATS ARE HIGHEST ON AVERAGE SO  
EVEN NORMAL PWATS ARE ENOUGH TO PRODUCE SCATTERED TO WIDESPREAD  
STORMS.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(00Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 527 PM MDT TUE JUL 22 2025  
 
STORMS ACROSS MUCH OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN NM WILL MOVE SLOWLY AND  
ERRATICALLY THIS EVENING. BRIEF HEAVY DOWNPOURS MAY REDUCE  
VISIBILITY TO MVFR OR IFR LEVELS AT TIMES, BUT SIGNIFICANT  
VISIBILITY REDUCTIONS SHOULD BRIEF. SMALL HAIL, FREQUENT  
LIGHTNING, AND GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS OF 30 TO 40KT WILL BE THE MAIN  
THREATS. SHOWER AND STORM ACTIVITY WILL LINGER LONGEST OVERNIGHT  
ACROSS CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN NM WITH MOST ACTIVITY LIKELY  
DISSIPATING AT AROUND 09Z. ANOTHER CROP OF SHOWERS AND STORMS  
DEVELOP ACROSS THE SOUTHWEST AND NORTHERN MOUNTAINS MIDDAY  
WEDNESDAY WITH A MORE PROGRESSIVE MOTION TO THE EAST-NORTHEAST.  
COVERAGE IS EXPECTED TO BE LOWER COMPARED TO TODAY WITH KSAF AND  
KLVS SEEING HIGHER CHANCES FOR IMPACTS FROM STORM ACTIVITY.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 151 PM MDT TUE JUL 22 2025  
 
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE NOT EXPECTED THE NEXT 7 DAYS  
AROUND THE AREA. NUMEROUS SHOWERS AND STORMS ARE EXPECTED EVERYWHERE  
TODAY EXCEPT THE NORTHWEST PLATEAU. WETTING RAINFALL IS LIKELY OVER  
MUCH OF THE AREA AND LOCALIZED RAINFALL TOTALS MAY EXCEED 2" IN  
PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND NORTHERN NEW MEXICO. STORM COVERAGE TRENDS  
DOWN WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, WITH SCATTERED STORMS FAVORING  
SOUTHWESTERN AND NORTHEASTERN AREAS. TEMPERATURES RISE AND STORM  
CHANCES CONTINUE TO DECREASE FRIDAY INTO THE WEEKEND. RAIN CHANCES  
WILL INCREASE AGAIN EARLY NEXT WEEK, WITH THE GREATEST PRECIPITATION  
CHANCES FAVORING THE HIGH TERRAIN OF NORTHERN AND WESTERN NM.  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
FARMINGTON...................... 65 89 62 90 / 20 5 5 0  
DULCE........................... 52 85 51 87 / 40 40 20 30  
CUBA............................ 57 83 59 86 / 50 30 20 20  
GALLUP.......................... 56 84 55 86 / 40 20 10 5  
EL MORRO........................ 55 79 55 83 / 70 40 20 10  
GRANTS.......................... 59 82 58 87 / 60 40 20 10  
QUEMADO......................... 57 78 55 84 / 70 60 30 10  
MAGDALENA....................... 61 79 60 84 / 70 60 20 10  
DATIL........................... 56 77 56 82 / 70 70 20 20  
RESERVE......................... 54 82 55 89 / 70 70 20 10  
GLENWOOD........................ 57 87 60 93 / 70 60 10 5  
CHAMA........................... 49 78 50 81 / 50 60 20 50  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 59 81 61 82 / 60 40 10 40  
PECOS........................... 56 81 58 83 / 60 50 20 50  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 53 78 53 81 / 70 70 30 70  
RED RIVER....................... 46 69 48 71 / 70 70 30 80  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 44 73 47 73 / 60 70 30 70  
TAOS............................ 53 82 53 84 / 70 60 30 50  
MORA............................ 51 78 54 79 / 60 60 20 60  
ESPANOLA........................ 61 88 60 90 / 60 40 20 30  
SANTA FE........................ 59 83 60 84 / 60 40 20 40  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 59 86 60 88 / 60 30 10 30  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 66 86 66 90 / 70 30 20 20  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 66 88 66 92 / 70 30 20 10  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 67 90 67 94 / 70 20 10 5  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 67 88 67 92 / 70 20 20 10  
BELEN........................... 66 89 66 93 / 70 30 10 5  
BERNALILLO...................... 66 89 66 94 / 70 20 20 10  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 65 89 65 93 / 70 20 10 5  
CORRALES........................ 66 89 67 94 / 70 20 20 10  
LOS LUNAS....................... 66 89 66 93 / 70 20 10 5  
PLACITAS........................ 64 86 64 89 / 70 30 20 20  
RIO RANCHO...................... 66 89 66 93 / 70 20 20 10  
SOCORRO......................... 67 87 66 94 / 70 50 20 5  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 58 81 61 85 / 70 30 20 20  
TIJERAS......................... 60 83 61 86 / 70 30 20 20  
EDGEWOOD........................ 57 83 59 86 / 60 30 10 20  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 57 84 58 87 / 60 30 10 20  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 56 80 59 81 / 60 30 10 30  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 57 80 59 85 / 70 40 20 20  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 58 80 60 84 / 70 50 20 20  
CARRIZOZO....................... 62 81 64 87 / 70 50 10 20  
RUIDOSO......................... 56 74 60 79 / 60 60 5 30  
CAPULIN......................... 55 79 56 78 / 40 70 40 80  
RATON........................... 55 83 55 82 / 50 70 30 80  
SPRINGER........................ 57 85 56 86 / 50 70 30 70  
LAS VEGAS....................... 55 82 56 82 / 60 50 20 50  
CLAYTON......................... 63 86 63 86 / 30 30 30 40  
ROY............................. 60 84 60 84 / 50 50 30 50  
CONCHAS......................... 65 92 66 91 / 50 40 20 30  
SANTA ROSA...................... 64 90 66 89 / 60 40 20 20  
TUCUMCARI....................... 65 91 66 89 / 40 20 20 20  
CLOVIS.......................... 66 90 67 94 / 50 20 20 10  
PORTALES........................ 66 91 68 95 / 50 20 20 10  
FORT SUMNER..................... 66 91 68 94 / 50 20 20 10  
ROSWELL......................... 70 92 70 96 / 50 10 0 5  
PICACHO......................... 62 84 65 89 / 50 40 5 10  
ELK............................. 60 81 62 86 / 50 50 0 20  
 
 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
FLOOD WATCH UNTIL 10 PM MDT THIS EVENING FOR NMZ206-208-211-212-  
214-215-218-219-221>224-226-229-241.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...16  
LONG TERM....16  
AVIATION...71  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NM Page
Main Text Page