934  
FXUS65 KABQ 220834  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
134 AM MST SAT NOV 22 2025  
   
..NEW SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, FIRE WEATHER  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
UPDATED AT 131 AM MST SAT NOV 22 2025  
 
- PATCHY FOG AND FREEZING FOG WILL CONTINUE ACROSS NORTHEAST  
AND EAST CENTRAL NEW MEXICO THIS MORNING, CREATING REDUCED  
VISIBILITY AND SLICK SPOTS ON ROAD SURFACES.  
 
- ANOTHER STORM SYSTEM WILL BRING A ROUND OF WIDESPREAD RAIN AND  
MOUNTAIN SNOW TONIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY AND SUNDAY NIGHT. A FEW  
INCHES OF ACCUMULATING SNOW WILL AGAIN BE FAVORED ABOVE 8,500  
FEET.  
 
- THOSE WITH TRAVEL PLANS FOR THE WEEKEND AFTER THANKSGIVING WILL  
WANT TO STAY UPDATED WITH THE LATEST WEATHER FORECASTS AND  
STATEMENTS. REMAIN PREPARED TO ALTER TRAVEL ROUTES OR PLANS, AS  
ANOTHER PACIFIC STORM SYSTEM WILL POTENTIALLY IMPACT NEW  
MEXICO.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(TODAY THROUGH SUNDAY)  
ISSUED AT 131 AM MST SAT NOV 22 2025  
 
AN UPPER LEVEL LOW HAS MOVED OFFSHORE OF THE UPPER BAJA PENINSULA  
THIS MORNING WITH SOME MID TO HIGH LEVEL MOISTURE AND CLOUD COVER  
FEEDING INTO PORTIONS OF NM. THESE ALTOCUMULUS/ALTOSTRATUS CLOUDS  
ARE PROJECTED TO LIFT NORTHWARD AND CLEAR THROUGH THE MORNING BEFORE  
ANOTHER WAVE MOVES IN AGAIN AS THE UPPER LOW CROSSES THE PENINSULA  
INTO THE UPPER GULF OF CA. IN ADDITION TO THE CURRENT MID LEVEL  
CLOUDS, LOW STRATUS AND PATCHY FOG ARE EXPANDING OVER PORTIONS OF  
NORTHERN TO EAST CENTRAL NM, AS WINDS ARE LIGHT AND NEAR SURFACE  
HUMIDITY IS HIGH AFTER THE RECENT PRECIPITATION ON THURSDAY. IN  
ADDITION, A WEAK FRONT OR WIND SHIFT IS SLIDING INTO THE SOUTHERN  
PLAINS, ADVECTING SLIGHTLY HIGHER DEWPOINTS AND THIS WILL CONTINUE  
ASSISTING THE STRATUS/FOG DEVELOPMENT THROUGH DAWN. THE LOW CLOUDS  
AND STRATUS WILL THEN BE SLOW TO DIMINISH THROUGH THE LATE MORNING  
AND EARLY AFTERNOON. THROUGH THE AFTERNOON THE UPPER LOW WILL BEGIN  
TO DRAW A WIDESPREAD SYNOPTIC SOUTHEASTERLY SURFACE FLOW INTO NM  
WITH GENERALLY LIGHT SPEEDS DURING THE DAY EXCEPT IN WEST CENTRAL  
ZONES (CLOSEST TO THE LOW) WHERE BREEZY CONDITIONS WILL TAKE SHAPE.  
 
GOING INTO TONIGHT, THE LOW WILL LIFT FARTHER NORTH INTO AZ WITH THE  
SURFACE FLOW OVER NM BACKING A BIT MORE EASTERLY. THIS WILL OPEN THE  
DOOR TO A GUSTY GAP/CANYON WIND IN VULNERABLE CENTRAL AREAS LIKE THE  
EASTERN ABQ METRO WHERE GUSTS OF 30 TO 35 MPH ARE LIKELY OVERNIGHT.  
LIKELY OF MORE INTEREST WILL BE THE ONSET OF PRECIPITATION FROM THE  
LOW WHICH SHOULD BEGIN IN THE LATE EVENING OVER FAR WEST CENTRAL AND  
SOUTHWESTERN ZONES BEFORE QUICKLY EXPANDING THROUGH CENTRAL AND SOME  
EASTERN AREAS AFTER MIDNIGHT AND THROUGH THE MORNING. THROUGH THE  
DAY SUNDAY, THE LOW WILL LIFT INTO SOUTH CENTRAL CO. WIDESPREAD RAIN  
AND MOUNTAIN SNOW WILL ACCOMPANY THE DIFFLUENT FLOW AHEAD OF THE LOW  
BEFORE INTERIOR DYNAMICS OF THE LOW BECOME THE DOMINANT FORCING. NOW  
THAT WE ARE WITHIN THE TEMPORAL WINDOW OF HIGHER RESOLUTION MODELS  
AND CAMS, THE OVERALL QPF PICTURE FOR SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY IS  
STARTING TO BECOME A BIT MORE HETEROGENEOUS WITH AN OVERALL  
REDUCTION IN QPF, ESPECIALLY IN LOWER ELEVATION AREAS OUTSIDE OF THE  
FAR EASTERN PLAINS. STILL, GENERAL AMOUNTS OF 0.1 TO 0.4" ARE  
MODELED WITH THE NORTHERN MOUNTAINS AND FAR EASTERN PLAINS HOSTING  
THE HIGHER AMOUNTS. SNOW LEVELS STILL LOOK TO REMAIN QUITE HIGH WITH  
700 MB TEMPERATURES OF -2 TO -3 C AROUND THE CORE OF THE LOW  
SUGGESTING THAT APPRECIABLE ACCUMULATIONS WOULD BE CONFINED TO AREAS  
ABOVE 8,000 TO 8,500 FT WITH LOW SNOW-TO-LIQUID RATIOS (OFTEN  
RANGING BETWEEN 4:1 TO 8:1 BEFORE CLIMBING SOME LATE SUNDAY). THIS  
WILL YIELD A FEW INCHES OF SNOW, ESPECIALLY OVER THE NORTHERN  
MOUNTAINS, AND ANOTHER WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY WILL BE HOISTED.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY)  
ISSUED AT 131 AM MST SAT NOV 22 2025  
 
PRECIPITATION WILL TURN VERY LIGHT INTO SUNDAY NIGHT AS THE LOW  
TREKS TOWARD NORTHWESTERN KS. ANY ADDITIONAL RAIN/SNOW WILL TEND TO  
STAY CONFINED TO NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH CENTRAL NM ZONES WITH MOSTLY  
NEGLIGIBLE AMOUNTS. LOW CLOUDS AND FOG WILL PRESENT A CHALLENGE TO  
PINPOINT SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MONDAY MORNING WITH SATURATED SOILS  
TRYING TO PRIME CONDENSATION PROCESSES WHILE WESTERLY DONWSLOPE  
(WARMING) FLOW OFFSETS IN SOME LEEWARD AREAS. PRECIPITATION WOULD BE  
PRONE TO FULLY CEASE BY LATE MONDAY MORNING WITH SCATTERED LOW  
CUMULUS AND STRATOCUMULUS LINGERING INTO THE AFTERNOON. BY MONDAY  
AFTERNOON, THE FLOW ALOFT WOULD BE FROM THE WEST NORTHWEST WITH A  
RELATIVELY STRONG GRADIENT ALOFT AND HIGHER SURFACE PRESSURES OVER  
THE FOUR CORNERS. THIS WOULD LEAD TO GUSTY WINDS OVER THE CENTRAL  
HIGHLANDS AND ADJACENT HIGH PLAINS WHERE GUSTS OF 35-45 MPH ARE  
LIKELY.  
 
ON TUESDAY, ATTENTION WILL TURN TO THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS WHERE  
THE NEXT VIGOROUS PERTURBATION ALOFT WILL BE MOVING EAST  
SOUTHEASTWARD. THE GFS/GEFS SOLUTIONS CONTINUE TO DEPICT THIS  
FEATURE STRONGER AND COLDER AS A CLOSED LOW WHILE ECMWF/EPS  
SOLUTIONS LEAN MORE TOWARDS AN OPEN SHORTWAVE SOLUTION. EITHER SUITE  
OF SOLUTIONS SENDS DOWN A NOTABLE BACKDOOR COLD FRONT INTO EASTERN  
NM TUESDAY, WITH THE GFS/GEFS BEING STRONGER WITH THE COLD AIR  
ADVECTION. THIS LOOKS TO BE A MOSTLY DRY PASSAGE WITH ONLY A FEW  
SPRINKLES/FLURRIES BEING DEPICTED IN CO AND FAR NORTHEASTERN NM.  
TEMPERATURES WOULD START FALLING BELOW CLIMATOLOGY TUESDAY,  
ESPECIALLY IN NORTHERN ZONES, AND THE COOLING WOULD CONTINUE INTO  
WEDNESDAY FOR THE EASTERN PLAINS (STILL JUST 2 TO 6 DEGREES BELOW  
NORMAL).  
 
WITH THE FRONTAL PASSAGE OUT OF THE WAY, A DRY AND MOSTLY TRANQUIL  
DAY WILL BE ON HAND FOR THE THANKSGIVING DAY HOLIDAY AS ZONAL FLOW  
ALOFT PREVAILS. TEMPERATURES WILL RISE TO OR JUST SLIGHTLY ABOVE  
NORMAL WITH LOTS OF 50'S AND LOW 60'S FOR DAYTIME HIGHS. THE DRY  
ZONAL PATTERN WILL PERSIST INTO FRIDAY WITH TEMPERATURES GAINING  
ANOTHER 1 TO 3 DEGREES OF WARMING.  
 
THE FLOW ALOFT LOOKS TO BUCKLE INTO SATURDAY AND MORE-SO INTO SUNDAY  
AS A DEEP PACIFIC TROUGH OVERTAKES THE GREAT BASIN AND SOUTHWESTERN  
STATES. THIS WOULD BE A COLDER CORE SYSTEM CAPABLE OF LOWER SNOW  
LEVELS AND THEREFORE MORE TRAVEL IMPACTS FOR THE WEEKEND FOLLOWING  
THE HOLIDAY. FOR NOW THERE IS REMARKABLE AGREEMENT AND CONSENSUS FOR  
THIS SYSTEM AMONG DETERMINISTIC, ENSEMBLE, AND AI MODEL MEMBERS.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(06Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 1043 PM MST FRI NOV 21 2025  
 
SCT TO BKN MID-LEVEL CLOUDS WILL MOVE ACROSS THE AIRSPACE FROM  
SOUTH TO NORTHWEST OVERNIGHT. A WEAK BOUNDARY ACROSS NORTHEAST NM  
IS PUSHING SOUTHEAST ACROSS THE REST OF EASTERN NM. LOW CLOUDS  
WILL DEVELOP ACROSS MUCH OF NORTHEAST AND EAST CENTRAL NM IN IT'S  
WAKE EARLY SATURDAY MORNING. THIS WILL RESULT IN SOME IFR TO  
POTENTIALLY AS LOW AS AIRPORT MINIMUM CONDITIONS FOR SITES ACROSS  
THIS AREA, INCLUDING KLVS AND KTCC. SOME PATCHY FOG CANNOT BE  
RULED OUT AS WELL. HAVE INCLUDED A TEMPO AT KTCC BUT DID NOT HAVE  
ENOUGH CONFIDENCE TO INCLUDE IT FOR KLVS. LOW CLOUDS LOOK TO  
REMAIN IN THE VICINITY BUT NOT DIRECTLY IMPACT KROW AROUND SUNRISE  
SATURDAY AT THIS TIME. LOW CLOUDS ACROSS NORTHEAST AND EAST  
CENTRAL NM LOOK TO BREAK UP DURING THE LATE MORNING HOURS WITH TWO  
AREAS OF SCT TO BKN MID TO HIGH LEVEL CLOUDS MOVING INTO WESTERN  
AND CENTRAL NM AND FAR SOUTHEAST NM DURING THE AFTERNOON. HEADING  
INTO THE EVENING HOURS, SOUTHEAST WINDS INCREASE ACROSS WESTERN  
NM ALONG WITH A STRENGTHENING EAST GAP WIND AT KABQ. GUSTS OF  
AROUND 25 KTS WILL BE POSSIBLE AT KABQ RIGHT AT THE END OF THE TAF  
PERIOD. THE LEADING EDGE OF RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW SHOWERS MOVES  
INTO FAR SOUTHWEST NM ALONG WITH LOWERING VFR CEILINGS IN WESTERN  
NM, INCLUDING KFMN AND KGUP, AT THE END OF THE PERIOD.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 131 AM MST SAT NOV 22 2025  
 
NO FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS ARE FORECAST THROUGH THE NEXT 7 DAYS. NO  
PRECIPITATION IS FORECAST TODAY, BUT WIDESPREAD WETTING RAIN  
(GENERALLY BETWEEN 0.1 TO 0.4") AND MOUNTAIN SNOW WILL RETURN  
TONIGHT INTO SUNDAY. GOOD TO EXCELLENT OVERNIGHT AND EARLY MORNING  
HUMIDITY RECOVERIES WILL CONTINUE INTO NEXT WEEK WHICH WILL ALSO  
HELP TO MITIGATE FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS. HOWEVER, WIND CONCERNS WILL  
INCLUDE GUSTY GAP/CANYON WINDS TONIGHT INTO SUNDAY MORNING AROUND  
VULNERABLE CENTRAL LOCALES SUCH AS THE EASTERN ALBUQUERQUE METRO  
AREA, ABO PASS, AND GLORIETA PASS. THEN, ON MONDAY BREEZY TO WINDY  
CONDITIONS WILL DEVELOP OVER THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS TO THE NEARBY  
HIGH PLAINS (CLINES CORNERS, VAUGHN, CORONA, FORT SUMNER) WHERE  
GUSTS OF 35 TO 45 MPH WILL OCCUR IN THE AFTERNOON. AS FOR PRESCRIBED  
BURNING, SMOKE VENTILATION AND DISPERSION WILL OFTEN BE POOR DURING  
THE FIRST HALF OF THE WORK WEEK NEXT WEEK, THE EXCEPTION BEING THE  
WINDIER AREAS OF THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS AND NEARBY HIGH PLAINS ON  
MONDAY.  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
FARMINGTON...................... 59 40 49 34 / 0 60 70 5  
DULCE........................... 59 29 44 27 / 0 50 100 30  
CUBA............................ 57 34 45 30 / 0 60 90 20  
GALLUP.......................... 59 33 45 28 / 0 80 60 10  
EL MORRO........................ 56 33 43 32 / 0 80 70 20  
GRANTS.......................... 57 34 47 29 / 0 80 60 10  
QUEMADO......................... 59 33 46 31 / 0 80 50 10  
MAGDALENA....................... 57 38 50 34 / 0 80 40 0  
DATIL........................... 55 34 45 32 / 0 80 40 5  
RESERVE......................... 64 33 47 25 / 0 90 50 5  
GLENWOOD........................ 67 36 51 29 / 5 90 50 0  
CHAMA........................... 53 27 40 24 / 0 40 100 40  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 54 35 44 33 / 0 80 90 30  
PECOS........................... 57 34 44 30 / 0 80 90 10  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 52 31 41 28 / 0 30 90 30  
RED RIVER....................... 46 24 36 23 / 0 30 90 30  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 52 20 40 19 / 0 30 90 20  
TAOS............................ 56 29 44 27 / 0 40 90 20  
MORA............................ 58 29 44 27 / 0 50 90 10  
ESPANOLA........................ 60 31 49 31 / 0 60 90 30  
SANTA FE........................ 57 37 45 34 / 0 80 90 20  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 59 36 48 32 / 0 80 90 20  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 62 42 51 39 / 0 80 70 5  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 63 40 53 35 / 0 80 70 5  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 64 40 55 33 / 0 80 60 5  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 62 41 53 35 / 0 80 70 5  
BELEN........................... 63 36 56 32 / 0 80 60 0  
BERNALILLO...................... 64 40 54 35 / 0 80 70 10  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 63 36 55 29 / 0 80 60 5  
CORRALES........................ 64 40 54 34 / 0 80 70 5  
LOS LUNAS....................... 63 37 55 32 / 0 80 60 0  
PLACITAS........................ 60 40 51 37 / 0 80 80 10  
RIO RANCHO...................... 62 40 53 35 / 0 80 70 5  
SOCORRO......................... 64 40 58 35 / 0 80 40 0  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 57 36 47 33 / 0 80 80 5  
TIJERAS......................... 59 37 49 34 / 0 80 80 5  
EDGEWOOD........................ 59 35 49 32 / 0 80 80 5  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 60 34 51 30 / 0 80 80 0  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 57 33 47 31 / 0 80 80 0  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 60 35 49 32 / 0 80 80 5  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 61 36 50 32 / 0 80 70 5  
CARRIZOZO....................... 64 40 53 33 / 0 70 70 0  
RUIDOSO......................... 58 37 48 33 / 0 60 70 0  
CAPULIN......................... 57 29 45 26 / 0 5 90 5  
RATON........................... 59 28 45 24 / 0 10 80 10  
SPRINGER........................ 60 28 49 26 / 0 10 80 5  
LAS VEGAS....................... 58 32 46 29 / 0 50 90 0  
CLAYTON......................... 62 35 51 35 / 0 0 90 5  
ROY............................. 59 33 47 31 / 0 20 90 0  
CONCHAS......................... 64 35 55 36 / 0 30 90 0  
SANTA ROSA...................... 61 36 55 37 / 0 50 90 0  
TUCUMCARI....................... 65 36 56 37 / 0 20 90 5  
CLOVIS.......................... 66 41 57 40 / 0 30 90 10  
PORTALES........................ 67 40 59 39 / 0 30 100 10  
FORT SUMNER..................... 64 37 57 37 / 0 40 90 0  
ROSWELL......................... 65 44 63 38 / 0 30 70 0  
PICACHO......................... 63 39 61 36 / 0 60 60 0  
ELK............................. 62 35 56 31 / 0 60 50 0  
 
 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM MIDNIGHT TONIGHT TO MIDNIGHT MST  
SUNDAY NIGHT FOR NMZ210-211-213-214.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...52  
LONG TERM....52  
AVIATION...71  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NM Page
Main Text Page