516  
FXUS65 KABQ 231149  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
449 AM MST SUN NOV 23 2025  
   
..NEW AVIATION  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
UPDATED AT 442 AM MST SUN NOV 23 2025  
 
- MINOR IMPACTS ARE EXPECTED THROUGH THE DAY AND INTO THE EARLY  
EVENING AS THE NEXT ROUND OF WINTER WEATHER BRINGS VALLEY RAIN  
AND MOUNTAIN SNOW TO MUCH OF NORTHERN AND CENTRAL NEW MEXICO.  
THREE TO EIGHT INCHES OF ACCUMULATING SNOW WILL BE COMMON ABOVE  
8,500 FEET.  
 
- THOSE WITH TRAVEL PLANS FOR THE LATE WEEKEND AND EARLY WEEK  
AFTER THANKSGIVING WILL WANT TO STAY UPDATED WITH THE LATEST  
WEATHER FORECASTS AND STATEMENTS. BE PREPARED TO ALTER TRAVEL  
ROUTES OR PLANS, AS THERE ARE INCREASING INDICATIONS A POTENT  
STORM SYSTEM WILL BRING TRAVEL IMPACTS ACROSS THE DESERT  
SOUTHWEST, INCLUDING NEW MEXICO.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(TODAY THROUGH MONDAY)  
ISSUED AT 109 AM MST SUN NOV 23 2025  
 
PACIFIC LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM IS MOVING NORTHEASTWARD INTO AZ AND WILL  
CROSS THE NM-CO BORDER LATER THIS AFTERNOON WITH CENTRAL 500 MB  
GEOPOTENTIAL HEIGHTS OF AROUND 561 DECAMETERS. PRECIPITATION HAS  
EXPANDED OVER SOUTH CENTRAL TO SOUTHEASTERN AZ WITH SOME EMBEDDED  
CONVECTION, AND AREAS OF RAIN AND HIGH MOUNTAIN SNOW WILL CONTINUE  
TO WORK INTO NM THROUGH THE MORNING. THE DIFFLUENT FLOW ALOFT  
PRECEDING THE LOW WILL BE THE DOMINANT GENERATOR FOR THE MORE  
WIDESPREAD AND LARGELY STRATIFORM PRECIPITATION, AND BY THIS  
AFTERNOON THE THERMAL TROUGH ALOFT AND UPPER LOW WILL BE MOVING OVER  
NM, PROVIDING SUFFICIENT INSTABILITY FOR CONVECTIVE SHOWERS AND A  
FEW THUNDERSTORMS ON A SPOTTIER BASIS. THE LOW WILL HAVE FILLED IN 3  
TO 5 DECAMETERS BY THIS AFTERNOON, SO VERTICAL STRETCHING WILL NOT  
BE AS STRONG, LEAVING DIURNAL AND TRANSIENT INSTABILITY TO BE AS  
MUCH OF A PLAYER FOR REGENERATING ADDITIONAL ROUNDS OF  
PRECIPITATION. OVERALL THE QPF STORY HAS NOT EVOLVED OR REDUCED TOO  
MUCH FROM THE PAST FEW DAYS OF EARLIER MODEL RUNS WITH GENERALLY 0.1  
TO 0.3 INCHES OF LIQUID EQUIVALENT BEING COMMON WITH HIGHER SWATHS  
CLOSER TO 0.5 INCH IN THE EASTERN PLAINS AND ON THE MOUNTAINS WHERE  
LOCALIZED MODEST OROGRAPHIC ENHANCEMENTS WILL OCCUR. AS FOR SNOW,  
THE NORTHERN MOUNTAINS REMAIN IN A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY WHERE  
THERE IS HIGH CONFIDENCE FOR A FEW (3 TO 8) INCHES OF ACCUMULATION  
(ISOLATED HIGHER AMOUNTS ABOVE 11 KFT). SOME AREAS BETWEEN 7,000 TO  
8,000 FT MAY BRIEFLY SEE SNOW MIXING IN WITH RAIN, INCLUDING  
PORTIONS OF INTERSTATE TRAVEL CORRIDORS (CONTINENTAL DIVIDE, SEDILLO  
HILL, CLINES CORNERS, AND LAS VEGAS TO RATON), BUT NO APPRECIABLE  
ACCUMULATION IS FORESEEN IN THESE AREAS. DAYTIME TEMPERATURES  
WILL RUN A COUPLE TO A FEW DEGREES BELOW NORMAL TODAY.  
 
PRECIPITATION RATES WILL DROP IN INTENSITY AFTER SUNSET WITH THE  
UPPER LOW WORKING INTO EASTERN CO WITH WEAKER VORT LOBES WRAPPING  
INTO NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH CENTRAL NM WHERE LIGHTER SHOWERS  
CONSISTING OF MAINLY FLURRIES AND SPRINKLES WILL CONTINUE. ONE  
CHALLENGE TONIGHT THROUGH MONDAY MORNING WILL BE PINPOINTING LIKELY  
AREAS FOR FOG AND FREEZING FOG DEVELOPMENT. DEWPOINTS IN THE MID  
30'S FOR MANY AREAS WILL LIMIT, BUT NOT ELIMINATE, THE PRESENCE OF  
FREEZING FOG, AND ANOTHER CONSIDERATION WILL BE THE SURFACE WINDS.  
WINDS WILL BE TURNING WEST OR WEST NORTHWEST THROUGH MONDAY MORNING  
WITH SOME BREEZY SPEEDS SETTING UP OVER HIGHLAND AREAS WHICH WOULD  
LIMIT FOG DEVELOPMENT TO THE LEE AREAS WHERE DOWNSLOPING PROCESSES  
WOULD WARM TEMPERATURES SLIGHTLY. IN CONTRAST, WEST SLOPES OF THE  
DIVIDE WILL BE BETTER CANDIDATES FOR FOG, OR AT LEAST LOW STRATUS,  
DEVELOPMENT.  
 
PRECIPITATION WOULD BE EXPECTED TO FULLY ABATE BY DAWN MONDAY WITH  
LINGERING LOW-BASED CUMULUS AND STRATOCUMULUS INTO THE AFTERNOON,  
ESPECIALLY IN NORTHWESTERN TO WEST CENTRAL NM. NORTHWEST FLOW ON THE  
BACKSIDE OF THE DEPARTING LOW WILL TURN BREEZY, MAINLY OVER THE  
CENTRAL TO SOUTH CENTRAL HIGHLANDS AND ADJACENT PLAINS. THE  
DOWNSLOPING WINDS WILL BOOST TEMPERATURES A FEW DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL  
IN EASTERN ZONES WHILE WESTERN AREAS MAKE MORE MODEST GAINS AND  
STRUGGLE TO REACH NORMALCY MONDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY)  
ISSUED AT 109 AM MST SUN NOV 23 2025  
 
A SHORTWAVE TROUGH WILL RACE ACROSS THE NORTHERN ROCKIES INTO THE  
NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS ON TUESDAY. WHILE THIS FEATURE IS MODELED TO  
BE FAIRLY VIGOROUS, IT SEEMS AS THOUGH LATEST GUIDANCE HAS LEANED  
BACK SLIGHTLY ON THE STRENGTH. STILL, THIS WILL INCREASE THE  
GRADIENT ALOFT WITH WEST NORTHWEST WINDS PERSISTING OVER NM, AND THE  
SHORTWAVE WILL SEND DOWN AN ACCOMPANYING SURFACE FRONT WHICH WILL  
ENTER OUR NORTHEASTERN ZONES BY MIDDAY TUESDAY. SMALL PERTURBATIONS  
IN THE WEST NORTHWEST FLOW ALOFT LOOK TO GENERATE VERY LIGHT SHOWERS  
OVER CO, BUT ARE NOT PROJECTED TO DIP FARTHER SOUTH INTO NM. DAYTIME  
TEMPERATURES WILL START TO COOL IN NORTHERN ZONES WITH THE FRONTAL  
PASSAGE ON TUESDAY WITH THE EAST CENTRAL PLAINS SEEING ADDITIONAL  
REDUCTIONS INTO WEDNESDAY. OTHERWISE, WEDNESDAY WILL BE DEFINED BY  
DRY AND MOSTLY TRANQUIL CONDITIONS.  
 
A GENTLE RIDGE WILL THEN BUILD OVER NM ON THURSDAY, KEEPING THE  
TRANQUILITY GOING FOR THE THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY WHILE TEMPERATURES  
REBOUND ABOVE NORMAL BY 5 TO 10 DEGREES IN MOST LOCATIONS. DRY AND  
WARMER THAN NORMAL CONDITIONS WILL CONTINUE INTO FRIDAY, BUT THE  
ZONAL FLOW OVER NM WILL START TO INCREASE WHILE BECOMING  
INCREASINGLY PERTURBED TO OUR NORTH AND UPSTREAM. BREEZY CONDITIONS  
FOR MUCH OF NORTHERN AND CENTRAL NM WOULD BE A LIKELY OUTCOME IN  
THIS REGIME FRIDAY WITH THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS GUSTING THE MOST.  
 
THE WEEKEND AFTER THANKSGIVING CONTINUES TO BE A TIME FRAME OF BIG  
INTEREST, AND POTENTIALLY THE EARLY PART OF NEXT WEEK TOO, AS A JET  
STREAK IS MODELED TO RAPIDLY INTENSIFY PARALLEL TO THE BRITISH  
COLUMBIA COAST BEFORE SENDING A DEEP LONGWAVE TROUGH INTO THE  
WESTERN CONUS. AFTER STELLAR AGREEMENT AMONG MEDIUM RANGE MODEL  
SOLUTIONS 24 HOURS AGO, DISCREPANCIES HAVE STARTED TO PERCOLATE. THE  
DETERMINISTIC GFS IS CONSIDERABLY DEEPER, YET ADVERTISING A FARTHER  
NORTH TRACK THAN 24 HOURS AGO AND ALSO IN COMPARISON TO THE LATEST  
ECMWF. RESPECTIVE ENSEMBLE MEANS ALSO LEAN THESE DIRECTIONS, BUT  
ENSEMBLE MEMBER CLUSTERS ARE TELLING A FAIRLY DIVISIVE AND SOMEWHAT  
AMBIGUOUS STORY. FOR NOW, CONFIDENCE IN IMPACTFUL PRECIPITATION FOR  
NM ON SUNDAY (NOV 30) IS LOW WITH RELATIVELY HIGHER CONFIDENCE IN  
IMPACTS ON MON (DEC 1).  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(12Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 442 AM MST SUN NOV 23 2025  
 
A PACIFIC LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL CONTINUE TO BRING WIDESPREAD  
RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW TO MUCH OF NORTHERN AND CENTRAL NEW MEXICO  
THROUGH THE MORNING AND EARLY AFTERNOON. THEN, PRECIPITATION WILL  
TURN MORE SPOTTY AND SHOWERY WITH SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS ALSO  
PERIODICALLY DEVELOPING THROUGH THE AFTERNOON, MAINLY IN  
NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH CENTRAL PARTS OF THE STATE. EXPECT PERIODIC  
SCATTERED TO WIDESPREAD MVFR CONDITIONS (CEILINGS LESS THAN 3000  
FT AND VISIBILITY LESS THAN 5SM) WITH MORE PATCHY OR LOCALIZED  
AREAS OF IFR CONDITIONS (CEILINGS LESS THAN 1000 FT AND VISIBILITY  
LESS THAN 3SM). SNOW LEVELS WILL TEND TO BE AROUND 8,000 FT ABOVE  
SEA LEVEL WITH MORE PERSISTENT REDUCTIONS IN VISIBILITY AS WELL AS  
MOUNTAIN PEAK OBSCURATIONS OCCURRING ABOVE DUE TO SNOWFALL.  
PRECIPITATION WILL DECREASE IN COVERAGE AND INTENSITY AFTER DARK  
THIS EVENING, BUT THE THREAT OF MVFR TO IFR CEILINGS WILL PERSIST  
IN NORTHWESTERN TO NORTH CENTRAL NEW MEXICO THROUGH MONDAY  
MORNING.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 109 AM MST SUN NOV 23 2025  
 
WETTING RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW WILL KEEP FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS AT  
BAY TODAY. FUELS IN MANY AREAS ARE EXPECTED TO RECEIVE A BENEFICIAL  
0.1 TO 0.3" OF RAIN WITH PORTIONS OF THE EASTERN PLAINS FARING  
BETTER BETWEEN 0.25 AND 0.5" WHILE THE MOUNTAINS ACCUMULATE A FEW  
INCHES OF HEAVY, WET SNOW. PRECIPITATION WILL DEPART NM LATE TONIGHT  
INTO MONDAY MORNING WITH BREEZY CONDITIONS DEVELOPING THROUGH THE  
AFTERNOON MONDAY, MAINLY IN THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS AND NEARBY PLAINS  
(TORRANCE, GUADALUPE, DE BACA COUNTIES). GUSTS OF 30 TO 35 MPH WILL  
BE COMMON IN THESE AREAS, BUT AFTERNOON HUMIDITY WILL REMAIN  
RELATIVELY ELEVATED (35 TO 50%). GOOD TO EXCELLENT HUMIDITY  
RECOVERIES ARE ALSO FORECAST EACH NIGHT THIS WEEK, WHICH WILL LIMIT  
FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS DESPITE ADDITIONAL PRECIPITATION BYPASSING THE  
STATE. BREEZES WILL OFFER SOME BETTER SMOKE VENTILATION/DISPERSION  
IN CENTRAL HIGHLAND AREAS MONDAY, AND TO A LESSER EXTENT ON TUESDAY,  
BUT REMAINING AREAS OF NORTHERN AND CENTRAL NM WILL ENDURE POOR  
VENTILATION RATES.  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
FARMINGTON...................... 48 33 51 27 / 60 20 0 0  
DULCE........................... 46 29 46 21 / 100 40 0 0  
CUBA............................ 44 31 45 24 / 90 30 0 0  
GALLUP.......................... 44 28 51 21 / 40 20 0 0  
EL MORRO........................ 42 33 47 26 / 50 30 0 0  
GRANTS.......................... 47 29 52 23 / 50 10 0 0  
QUEMADO......................... 46 32 50 26 / 50 20 0 0  
MAGDALENA....................... 49 34 54 32 / 40 5 0 0  
DATIL........................... 45 32 50 27 / 30 10 0 0  
RESERVE......................... 47 27 57 25 / 60 5 0 0  
GLENWOOD........................ 53 31 61 29 / 70 5 0 0  
CHAMA........................... 41 25 41 18 / 100 50 0 0  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 43 32 47 29 / 90 20 0 0  
PECOS........................... 45 30 51 26 / 100 10 0 0  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 42 28 44 22 / 90 30 0 0  
RED RIVER....................... 36 24 37 18 / 90 30 0 0  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 40 20 43 11 / 90 20 0 0  
TAOS............................ 43 27 46 21 / 90 20 0 0  
MORA............................ 45 27 51 23 / 100 10 0 0  
ESPANOLA........................ 49 31 52 25 / 100 20 0 0  
SANTA FE........................ 46 33 48 29 / 100 20 0 0  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 49 31 51 27 / 100 20 0 0  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 51 38 53 35 / 90 20 0 0  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 53 37 56 33 / 90 20 0 0  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 55 34 58 29 / 80 10 0 0  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 53 35 56 32 / 90 10 0 0  
BELEN........................... 56 32 59 27 / 80 10 0 0  
BERNALILLO...................... 53 36 56 30 / 90 20 0 0  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 54 30 58 25 / 80 20 0 0  
CORRALES........................ 53 34 56 30 / 90 20 0 0  
LOS LUNAS....................... 54 30 58 26 / 80 10 0 0  
PLACITAS........................ 50 37 52 32 / 90 20 0 0  
RIO RANCHO...................... 52 36 55 32 / 90 20 0 0  
SOCORRO......................... 59 36 62 34 / 60 5 0 0  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 47 34 49 30 / 90 20 0 0  
TIJERAS......................... 48 35 50 31 / 90 20 0 0  
EDGEWOOD........................ 49 34 51 28 / 90 20 0 0  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 52 33 54 23 / 90 10 0 0  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 48 31 50 27 / 90 10 0 0  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 50 33 52 30 / 90 10 0 0  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 51 32 53 29 / 90 10 0 0  
CARRIZOZO....................... 54 35 55 33 / 90 10 0 0  
RUIDOSO......................... 49 33 52 33 / 80 0 0 0  
CAPULIN......................... 46 28 52 25 / 90 5 0 0  
RATON........................... 47 29 56 24 / 90 10 0 0  
SPRINGER........................ 48 28 58 23 / 90 0 0 0  
LAS VEGAS....................... 46 31 55 26 / 100 5 0 0  
CLAYTON......................... 50 37 60 33 / 80 0 0 0  
ROY............................. 47 31 58 27 / 100 0 0 0  
CONCHAS......................... 55 34 64 29 / 100 0 0 0  
SANTA ROSA...................... 55 38 61 32 / 90 5 0 0  
TUCUMCARI....................... 55 36 65 30 / 90 0 0 0  
CLOVIS.......................... 57 38 64 35 / 90 5 0 0  
PORTALES........................ 60 37 66 33 / 90 5 0 0  
FORT SUMNER..................... 57 37 64 32 / 90 5 0 0  
ROSWELL......................... 64 40 68 35 / 60 0 0 0  
PICACHO......................... 62 36 63 37 / 50 0 0 0  
ELK............................. 58 31 61 32 / 50 0 0 0  
 
 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL MIDNIGHT MST TONIGHT FOR NMZ210-  
211-213-214.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...52  
LONG TERM....52  
AVIATION...52  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NM Page
Main Text Page