298  
FXUS65 KABQ 041120 AAA  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
520 AM MDT SAT JUL 4 2026  
   
..NEW AVIATION  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
UPDATED AT 520 AM MDT SAT JUL 4 2026  
 
- SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM COVERAGE WILL INCREASE OVER NORTHERN  
AND CENTRAL NEW MEXICO EARLY NEXT WEEK. STRONG AND ERRATIC  
DOWNBURST WIND GUSTS, BRIEF HEAVY RAINFALL, AND FREQUENT  
LIGHTNING STRIKES WILL OCCUR WITH THE STRONGER CELLS.  
 
- THE RISK OF BURN SCAR FLASH FLOODING WILL TREND UP BEGINNING  
SUNDAY.  
 
- TEMPERATURES WILL RISE MID TO LATE NEXT WEEK RESULTING IN  
MODERATE HEAT RISK FOR LOWER ELEVATION LOCATIONS. HEAT-ILLNESSES  
WILL INCREASE FOR THOSE SENSITIVE TO HEAT, AND THOSE WITHOUT  
ADEQUATE COOLING OR HYDRATION.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(TODAY THROUGH SUNDAY)  
ISSUED AT 100 AM MDT SAT JUL 4 2026  
 
A SEASONABLY TO SLIGHTLY ABOVE AVERAGE HOT INDEPENDENCE DAY IS  
EXPECTED ACROSS THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT WITH A 594 TO 595 DAM 500 MB  
MONSOON HIGH OVERHEAD. WITH THE UPPER LEVEL WESTERLIES RETREATING  
NORTH, THIS WILL ALLOW SUBTROPICAL MOISTURE TO MOVE NORTH FROM  
MEXICO INTO THE STATE. THIS IS INDICATED BY HIGHER PWATS AROUND 0.3  
TO 0.5 INCH ACROSS NORTHERN AND CENTRAL NM AND AROUND 0.6 TO 1 INCH  
ACROSS SOUTHERN AND EASTERN NM. ISOLATED TO SCATTERED SHOWER AND  
THUNDERSTORM DEVELOPMENT IS EXPECTED ACROSS THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS  
AND SOUTHEAST PLAINS WITH SOME VIRGA SHOWERS ACROSS THE WEST CENTRAL  
AND SOUTHWEST MOUNTAINS, DUE TO THE MUCH DRIER LOW LEVELS, DURING  
THE AFTERNOON HOURS. MOST LIKELY RAINFALL AMOUNTS FROM POTENTIAL  
THUNDERSTORMS IN THE RUIDOSO AREA LOOK TO BE BETWEEN 0.1 TO 0.25  
INCHES WITH HIGH END RAINFALL AMOUNTS AROUND 0.5 TO 0.75 INCHES.  
GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS FROM VIRGA ACROSS THE WEST CENTRAL AND SOUTHWEST  
MOUNTAINS COULD MOVE INTO THE ABQ METRO AROUND SUNSET DURING  
FIREWORK DISPLAYS. STORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHEAST PLAINS TAPER OFF  
AROUND SUNSET DUE TO THE LOSS OF DAYTIME HEATING. HOWEVER, A  
BOUNDARY PUSHING SOUTHWEST FROM CURRENT STORMS ACROSS EASTERN  
COLORADO AND WESTERN KANSAS WILL HELP AID IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF  
ISOLATED TO SCATTERED STORMS ACROSS NORTHEAST NM LATER THIS  
EVENING AND EARLY OVERNIGHT HOURS BEFORE TAPERING OFF BEFORE  
SUNRISE SUNDAY.  
 
THE AFOREMENTIONED BOUNDARY WILL BE ALONG THE EAST SLOPES OF THE  
CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN WITH HIGHER MOISTURE (PWATS AROUND 0.6 TO 1  
INCH) ACROSS SOUTHERN AREAS AND ALONG AND EAST OF THE CENTRAL  
MOUNTAIN CHAIN SUNDAY MORNING. THE BOUNDARY, HIGHER MOISTURE, AND  
APPROACHING UPPER LEVEL DISTURBANCE OVER CALIFORNIA WILL HELP RESULT  
IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS FIRST ACROSS THE  
SOUTHWEST MOUNTAINS AND CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN MIDDAY BEFORE MOVING  
INTO NEARBY LOWER ELEVATIONS OF SOUTH CENTRAL AND EASTERN NM  
DURING THE MID AFTERNOON AND EVENING HOURS. STORMS COMING OFF THE  
SANGRE DE CRISTO MOUNTAINS WILL BE CAPABLE OF BECOMING STRONG TO  
SEVERE AS THE MOVE ACROSS THE NORTHEAST AND EAST CENTRAL PLAINS  
DUE TO MLCAPE VALUES > 1000 J/KG AND BULK SHEAR VALUES OF 20 TO 30  
KTS. DAMAGING WIND GUSTS AND LARGE HAIL WILL BE THE MAIN HAZARDS.  
SOME VIRGA ACTIVITY WITH SOME SPRINKLES AND GUSTY AND ERRATIC  
WINDS ACROSS WEST CENTRAL AND NORTH CENTRAL NM. HIGH TEMPERATURES  
WILL BE SEASONABLY HOT AREAWIDE WITH LOWER ELEVATIONS TOPPING OUT  
IN THE UPPER 80S TO MID 90S. STORMS ACROSS THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN  
CHAIN WILL PUSH HIGHER MOISTURE WEST INTO THE RGV AND WESTERN NM  
AS WELL AS RESULT IN A GUSTY EAST CANYON WIND FOR THE ABQ METRO SUNDAY  
EVENING SOME LINGERING SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY ACROSS  
EAST CENTRAL NM LATE SUNDAY EVENING BEFORE CLEARING SKIES EARLY  
MONDAY.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY)  
ISSUED AT 100 AM MDT SAT JUL 4 2026  
 
TYPICAL EARLY JULY WEATHER IS EXPECTED NEXT WEEK AFTER THE HOLIDAY  
WEEKEND. THE MONSOON HIGH WILL BE PRETTY MUCH BE OVERHEAD MONDAY  
SHIFTING WEST OF THE STATE OVER THE SOUTHERN GREAT BASIN TUESDAY  
THROUGH THURSDAY. DAYTIME HEATING COMBINED WITH HIGHER AVAILABLE  
MOISTURE (PWATS AROUND 0.7 TO 1 INCH) WILL HELP RESULT IN A BETTER  
COVERAGE OF DIURNAL SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY EACH AND EVERY  
DAY, FIRST FAVORING THE HIGHER TERRAIN MIDDAY, MOVING EAST AND  
SOUTHEAST INTO NEARBY LOWER ELEVATIONS LATER IN THE AFTERNOON AND  
EVENING HOURS BEFORE TAPERING OFF AT AROUND SUNSET. FLASH FLOODING  
WILL BE A CONCERN FOR AREA BURN SCARS (I.E. RUIDOSO), LOW LYING, AND  
POOR DRAINAGE AREAS AS IS TYPICAL DURING MONSOON SEASON. SHOWERS AND  
STORMS ACROSS WEST CENTRAL AND NORTHWEST NM WILL BE DRIER IN NATURE  
DUE TO THE DRIER LOW LEVELS WITH ERRATIC WIND GUSTS, SOME PATCHY  
BLOWING DUST, AND POTENTIAL ISOLATED DRY LIGHTNING STRIKES WHICH  
COULD LEAD TO MORE FIRE STARTS. HIGH TEMPERATURES BEFORE THE STORMS  
WILL BE SEASONABLY HOT IN THE UPPER 80S TO MID 90S ACROSS LOWER  
ELEVATIONS. THE MONSOON HIGH SHIFTS BACK EAST TOWARDS THE STATE  
BEGINNING THURSDAY MOVING OVER COLORADO BY NEXT WEEKEND. THIS WILL  
RESULT IN A LOWER COVERAGE OF SHOWERS AND STORMS ACROSS THE HIGHER  
TERRAIN WITH MOST LOWER ELEVATION AREAS REMAINING DRY. THE HIGHER  
MID AND UPPER LEVEL HEIGHTS AND LOWER STORM COVERAGE WILL ALSO  
RESULT IN HOTTER TEMPERATURES AREAWIDE WITH LOWER ELEVATIONS TOPPING  
OUT IN THE 90S TO LOW 100S, THUS RESULTING IN A HIGHER RISK FOR HEAT  
RELATED ILLNESSES.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(06Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 520 AM MDT SAT JUL 4 2026  
 
AREAS OF SMOKE AND HAZE MAY PRODUCE LOCAL VISIBILITY REDUCTIONS  
ACROSS SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH CENTRAL NM NEAR THE SACATON FIRE. A  
SLIGHTLY GREATER COVERAGE OF HIGH-BASED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS  
OVER THE SOUTH CENTRAL MOUNTAINS AND SOUTHEAST NM ON INDEPENDENCE  
DAY. AN AREA OF VIRGA WITH DOWNBURST WIND GUSTS WILL ALSO DEVELOP  
ACROSS THE WEST CENTRAL AND SOUTHWEST MOUNTAINS BY MID TO LATE  
THIS AFTERNOON BEFORE SHIFTING EAST ON OUTFLOW BOUNDARIES INTO THE  
RGV NEAR SUNSET. ISOLATED STORM POTENTIAL OVERNIGHT SATURDAY INTO  
EARLY SUNDAY ALONG A BOUNDARY ACROSS FAR NORTHEAST NM.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 100 AM MDT SAT JUL 4 2026  
 
LOCALLY ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ACROSS PARTS OF WESTERN AND  
CENTRAL NM FOR INDEPENDENCE DAY DUE TO ANOTHER DAY OF A LONG PERIOD  
OF SINGLE DIGIT RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES COMBINED WITH SOME PATCHY  
AREAS OF BREEZY WINDS. HAZY SKIES WITH SOME PATCHY LOWER  
VISIBILITY FOR AREAS NEAR ACTIVE WILDFIRES. SOME ISOLATED TO  
SCATTERED STORMS ACROSS THE EASTERN PLAINS AND SOUTH CENTRAL  
MOUNTAINS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. HIGHER MOISTURE MOVES IN  
FROM THE SOUTH AND EAST BEGINNING SUNDAY. THIS COMBINED WITH A  
PACIFIC DISTURBANCE ROTATING AROUND THE UPPER HIGH OVER THE DESERT  
SOUTHWEST WILL RESULT IN BETTER SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES,  
FAVORING AREAS ALONG AND EAST OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN SUNDAY  
AND ALL HIGHER TERRAIN AREAS BEGINNING MONDAY. SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS WILL BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL  
AND ISOLATED FLASH FLOODING ACROSS CENTRAL AND EASTERN NM. SHOWERS  
AND STORMS ACROSS WEST CENTRAL AND NORTHWEST NM WILL BE ON THE  
DRIER SIDE WITH GUSTY AND ERRATIC WINDS AND DRY LIGHTNING STRIKES  
BEING THE BIGGER THREAT. LOWERING SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM COVERAGE  
ACROSS THE HIGHER TERRAIN LATE NEXT WEEK ALONG WITH HOTTER  
TEMPERATURES AS THE UPPER HIGH SHIFTS BACK EAST TO OVER COLORADO.  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
FARMINGTON...................... 94 58 95 64 / 0 0 0 0  
DULCE........................... 91 45 92 49 / 0 0 0 0  
CUBA............................ 89 57 89 59 / 0 5 0 0  
GALLUP.......................... 92 55 89 56 / 0 0 5 0  
EL MORRO........................ 88 58 85 58 / 5 5 10 0  
GRANTS.......................... 92 59 90 58 / 5 10 5 0  
QUEMADO......................... 87 60 85 60 / 5 5 20 0  
MAGDALENA....................... 92 66 87 66 / 10 10 30 0  
DATIL........................... 87 63 84 62 / 10 10 30 0  
RESERVE......................... 91 57 93 57 / 5 5 20 0  
GLENWOOD........................ 94 62 97 62 / 5 5 10 0  
CHAMA........................... 84 45 85 48 / 0 0 0 0  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 89 65 87 63 / 0 0 10 0  
PECOS........................... 89 58 87 56 / 0 0 40 5  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 86 53 85 55 / 0 0 10 5  
RED RIVER....................... 76 40 76 47 / 0 0 30 0  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 82 39 80 43 / 0 0 40 5  
TAOS............................ 90 51 88 52 / 0 0 5 0  
MORA............................ 86 55 83 53 / 0 0 60 5  
ESPANOLA........................ 95 60 94 61 / 0 0 5 0  
SANTA FE........................ 91 63 88 62 / 0 0 20 0  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 94 60 91 60 / 0 0 20 0  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 96 70 94 68 / 0 5 20 0  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 97 66 95 65 / 0 5 20 0  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 99 65 97 65 / 5 10 10 0  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 98 68 96 67 / 0 5 10 0  
BELEN........................... 99 65 97 64 / 5 10 10 0  
BERNALILLO...................... 99 67 96 66 / 0 5 10 0  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 98 63 96 62 / 5 10 10 0  
CORRALES........................ 98 67 97 66 / 0 5 10 0  
LOS LUNAS....................... 99 65 96 64 / 5 10 10 0  
PLACITAS........................ 96 68 92 66 / 0 5 20 0  
RIO RANCHO...................... 98 67 96 66 / 0 5 10 0  
SOCORRO......................... 101 72 99 70 / 5 5 20 0  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 91 63 89 61 / 0 5 30 0  
TIJERAS......................... 93 61 90 60 / 0 5 30 0  
EDGEWOOD........................ 94 57 90 57 / 0 5 40 5  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 95 55 91 54 / 0 0 40 5  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 90 56 86 55 / 0 0 40 20  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 93 59 90 58 / 5 5 40 5  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 94 61 88 59 / 5 0 40 5  
CARRIZOZO....................... 94 66 92 65 / 10 5 40 10  
RUIDOSO......................... 86 60 84 59 / 40 5 60 10  
CAPULIN......................... 89 52 83 52 / 10 20 70 10  
RATON........................... 94 52 88 52 / 5 5 70 5  
SPRINGER........................ 97 55 88 54 / 0 5 60 5  
LAS VEGAS....................... 91 58 86 55 / 0 5 50 10  
CLAYTON......................... 94 60 90 59 / 10 40 50 20  
ROY............................. 94 58 87 57 / 0 10 60 10  
CONCHAS......................... 101 64 95 61 / 0 20 50 30  
SANTA ROSA...................... 100 63 91 60 / 5 5 40 40  
TUCUMCARI....................... 102 66 95 62 / 10 30 40 40  
CLOVIS.......................... 98 67 94 64 / 30 30 20 40  
PORTALES........................ 99 68 96 65 / 30 30 20 30  
FORT SUMNER..................... 101 67 95 64 / 20 10 40 40  
ROSWELL......................... 103 71 98 68 / 20 10 30 10  
PICACHO......................... 96 64 92 63 / 30 5 40 5  
ELK............................. 91 62 90 60 / 40 10 30 5  
 
 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...71  
LONG TERM....71  
AVIATION...71  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NM Page
Main Text Page