924  
FXUS65 KABQ 301921  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
121 PM MDT MON MAR 30 2026  
   
..NEW SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, FIRE WEATHER  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
UPDATED AT 117 PM MDT MON MAR 30 2026  
 
- DRY STORMS AND GUSTY SHOWERS IN WESTERN AND CENTRAL NEW MEXICO  
MAY PRODUCE ERRATIC WIND GUSTS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING THEN  
AGAIN ON TUESDAY. DRY STORMS MAY CAUSE NEW FIRE STARTS.  
 
- BENEFICIAL LIGHT RAIN AND HIGH MOUNTAIN SNOW ARRIVE LATE  
TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, WITH PRECIPITATION FAVORING NORTHERN  
NEW MEXICO.  
 
- STRONG WEST WINDS WEDNESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY WILL CREATE HAZARDOUS  
CROSSWINDS FOR HIGH PROFILE VEHICLES. INCREASING LIKELIHOOD OF  
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS IN EASTERN NEW MEXICO ON  
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(THIS EVENING THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 117 PM MDT MON MAR 30 2026  
 
IN ADDITION TO NEAR TO RECORD-BREAKING HIGH TEMPERATURES, TODAY'S  
OTHER WEATHER IMPACTS WILL BE FOCUSED ON GUSTY VIRGA SHOWERS AND DRY  
THUNDERSTORMS IN PORTIONS OF WESTERN TO CENTRAL NM. THE UPPER LEVEL  
PATTERN IS DEFINED BY A STIFF BELT OF ZONAL FLOW OVER THE NORTHERN  
CONUS WHERE THE POLAR JET IS LOCATED, AND WHILE SPEEDS ARE MORE  
SUBDUED THIS FAR SOUTH IN NM, THERE IS 15 TO 25 KT OF FLOW AT 700 MB  
THAT WILL KEEP PREVAILING SURFACE WINDS BREEZY THIS AFTERNOON. MID  
TO HIGH LEVEL MOISTURE CAN BE SEEN ON SATELLITE ENTERING NM FROM THE  
SOUTHWEST, BUT CUMULUS AND ANY SUBSEQUENT SHOWERS/STORMS WILL BE  
HIGH-BASED WITH A VERY DEEP AND DRY BOUNDARY LAYER TO OVERCOME,  
MAKING MEASURABLE RAINFALL HARD TO COME BY. RATHER, DOWNDRAFTS WILL  
HAVE A LOT OF EVAPORATION POTENTIAL WITH HIGH DCAPE THAT COULD LEAD  
TO GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS THROUGH THE EARLY EVENING AS THESE ANEMIC  
SHOWERS AND STORMS FIZZLE INTO CENTRAL ZONES. WHILE NO RED FLAG  
WARNINGS ARE OUT (PREVAILING WINDS ARE WELL BELOW TRADITIONAL  
CRITERIA), THESE SCENARIOS ALWAYS POSE LARGE CONCERNS FOR NEW FIRE  
STARTS WITH RAPID SPREAD POTENTIAL UNDER THE GUSTY OUTFLOWS. SHOWERS  
AND STORMS SHOULD LARGELY WANE BEFORE MIDNIGHT, BUT A FEW CAMS, SUCH  
AS THE OFTEN OVERZEALOUS FV3, DO CARRY A FEW STRAY CELLS INTO THE  
EARLY MORNING HOURS TUESDAY. MID TO HIGH CLOUD COVER WILL REMAIN  
FAIRLY EXTENSIVE OVERNIGHT, AND CONSEQUENTLY LOW TEMPERATURES WILL  
BE ON THE WARMER SIDE.  
 
ON TUESDAY, THE FLOW ALOFT WILL START TO TURN MORE WEST  
SOUTHWESTERLY, INCREASING SLIGHTLY AS A SHORTWAVE TROUGH APPROACHES  
CA. A FEW WEAK SMALL SCALE PERTURBATIONS WILL BE EMBEDDED IN THE  
FLOW OVER THE FOUR CORNERS AND NM, HELPING SPAWN A FEW MORE WEAK  
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS OVER WESTERN AND CENTRAL ZONES THROUGH  
TUESDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. CLOUD BASES WILL LOWER SLIGHTLY, BUT  
THIS ACTIVITY WILL ONCE AGAIN HAVE DIFFICULTY PRODUCING SIGNIFICANT  
RAINFALL. PREVAILING WINDS WILL BE A BIT STRONGER PER THE FLOW  
ALOFT. THE LEE-SIDE SURFACE TROUGH WILL TAKE A DIFFERENT ORIENTATION  
ON TUESDAY, DROPPING SOUTHEASTWARD OVER THE TX PANHANDLE WHILE A  
BACKDOOR FRONT MOVES INTO EASTERN CO AND WESTERN KS, JUST BARELY  
PUSHING INTO UNION COUNTY, NM. MANY LOCATIONS WILL OBSERVE A FEW  
DEGREES OF COOLING, BUT TEMPERATURES WILL STILL RUN ABOVE NORMAL  
IN ALL AREAS BY 5 TO 15 DEGREES ON TUESDAY.  
 
INTO TUESDAY NIGHT, THE FLOW ALOFT INCREASES FROM THE SOUTHWEST AS  
THE AFOREMENTIONED SHORTWAVE TROUGH ENCROACHES UPON THE FOUR  
CORNERS. BETTER BAROCLINICITY AND STRONGER FORCING WITH THIS  
SHORTWAVE WILL YIELD INCREASED PRECIPITATION WITH SOME OROGRAPHIC TO  
BRIEF PERIODS OF STRATIFORM PRECIPITATION ENSUING OVER NORTHWESTERN  
TO NORTH CENTRAL ZONES THROUGH DAYBREAK WEDNESDAY.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY)  
ISSUED AT 117 PM MDT MON MAR 30 2026  
 
DURING THE DAYTIME WEDNESDAY, THE SHORTWAVE TROUGH AXIS WILL CROSS  
THE ROCKIES BY LATE AFTERNOON, ACCOMPANIED WITH A PACIFIC FRONT  
PASSAGE. THIS WILL SPREAD MORE RAIN AND HIGH MOUNTAIN SNOW OVER  
NORTHERN NM WITH PRECIPITATION TAPERING AND BECOMING A BIT MORE  
ISOLATED OR SCATTERED FARTHER SOUTH, ESPECIALLY SOUTH OF I-40.  
BLENDED QPF GUIDANCE CONTINUES TO PAINT A COUPLE TO A FEW TENTHS OF  
AN INCH OVER NORTHWESTERN TO NORTH CENTRAL ZONES, VERY BENEFICIAL,  
BUT STILL NOT ENOUGH TO PUT A DENT IN THE DROUGHT. WITH LOW SNOW-TO-  
LIQUID RATIOS OF 5:1 TO 8:1, A COUPLE TO A FEW INCHES OF SNOW ARE  
SLATED FOR THE MOUNTAINS ABOVE 10KFT, ESPECIALLY ON THE TUSAS RANGE  
NEAR THE NM-CO BORDER. FARTHER SOUTH, HIGHER RESOLUTION MODELS SUCH  
AS THE NAM AND NEW RRFS STILL DEPICT CONVECTION ALONG THE PACIFIC  
FRONT DURING THE MID DAY TIME FRAME. WHILE THE PRECIPITATION WILL BE  
A WELCOME SIGHT, IT WILL BE EARLY APRIL, TRADITIONALLY OUR WINDIEST  
MONTH, AND THE TIGHT GRADIENT ALOFT AND AT THE SURFACE WITH A DEEP  
LEE-SIDE CYCLONE WILL LEAD TO VERY STRONG SURFACE WINDS WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON. MANY CENTRAL TO NORTHEASTERN ZONES ARE STILL PROJECTED TO  
REACH THE 50 MPH WIND GUST CRITERIA FOR A WIND ADVISORY.  
 
AFTER FALLING BACK CLOSER TO SEASONAL NORMALS ON WEDNESDAY,  
TEMPERATURES GAIN A FEW DEGREES ON THURSDAY AS DRIER WEST SOUTHWEST  
FLOW ALOFT DEVELOPS OVER NM. THIS CHANGE TO THE FLOW REGIME WILL BE  
IN RESPONSE TO THE NEXT PACIFIC LOW THAT WILL BE CROSSING  
NORTHWESTERN STATES THURSDAY. THE FEATURE WILL TREK INTO THE PLAINS  
FRIDAY WITH THE GFS AND GEFS ENSEMBLE MEAN STILL LEANING TOWARD A  
MORE NORTHWARD PATH INTO ND WHILE THE EC AND ITS ENSEMBLE MEAN  
ADVERTISE A TRACK FARTHER SOUTH NEAR CO/WY/SD. EITHER SOLUTION WILL  
LEAVE NM WITH MOSTLY WIND AND A DRY PACIFIC FRONT ON FRIDAY. A SPLIT  
FLOW PATTERN THEN BECOMES ESTABLISHED THIS WEEKEND WITH THE POLAR  
AND SUBTROPICAL JETS BOTH DIVERTING NORTH AND SOUTH OF NM,  
RESPECTIVELY. THIS WILL LEAD TO LIGHTER WINDS AND SEASONABLE  
TEMPERATURES IN THE WAKE OF FRIDAY'S FRONT.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(18Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 1113 AM MDT MON MAR 30 2026  
 
MID AND HIGH LEVEL CLOUDS WILL INCREASE TODAY WITH WEAK SHOWERS  
AND THUNDERSTORMS STRUGGLING TO TAKE SHAPE OVER WESTERN AND  
CENTRAL AREAS OF NEW MEXICO. THESE WILL PRODUCE LITTLE RAINFALL,  
BUT WILL BE CAPABLE OF HURLING OUT ABRUPT, STRONG, AND ERRATIC  
WIND GUSTS THROUGH THE EARLY EVENING. A FEW LIGHTNING STRIKES WILL  
ALSO BE POSSIBLE. PREVAILING WINDS WILL BE GUSTY THIS AFTERNOON  
(GUSTS OF 20 TO 25 KT BEING COMMON) THROUGH THE EARLY EVENING,  
AND THEN THEY WILL SETTLE DOWN AND DIMINISH. WINDS WILL RE-  
STRENGTHEN LATE TUESDAY MORNING INTO THE AFTERNOON.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 117 PM MDT MON MAR 30 2026  
 
BREEZY TO WINDY CONDITIONS ARE ONGOING OVER MOST OF NORTHERN NM  
TODAY WITH WIDESPREAD LOW HUMIDITY PLAGUING EASTERN ZONES. SLOW  
INCREASES IN MID TO HIGH LEVEL MOISTURE IN WESTERN ZONES OF NM ARE  
LEADING TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF VERY HIGH-BASED CUMULUS THAT WILL  
SLOWLY EVOLVE INTO PALTRY SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH THE  
EARLY EVENING. THE HIGH BASES OF THESE SHOWERS/STORMS WILL INCREASE  
EVAPORATION WITH VIRGA AND GUSTY DOWNDRAFT WINDS BEING MORE COMMON  
ALONG WITH AN INCREASED THREAT FOR DRY LIGHTNING. THIS ACTIVITY WILL  
REDUCE AND SLOWLY DIMINISH AS IT SHIFTS INTO CENTRAL NM THROUGH THE  
EVENING.  
 
ON TUESDAY, A SLIGHT INCREASE IN WINDS ALOFT WILL TRANSLATE TO MORE  
WIDESPREAD BREEZY TO WINDY CONDITIONS, PARTICULARLY OVER NORTHERN  
ZONES WHERE OCCASIONAL GUSTS OF 30 MPH WILL BE COMMON WITH A FEW  
ISOLATED GUSTS TO 35 MPH. FORTUNATELY, WHERE THE STRONGEST WINDS ARE  
LOCATED, HUMIDITY WILL UNDERGO SLIGHT RISES, WITH MANY AREAS  
HOVERING BETWEEN 20 TO 25% LATE TUESDAY AFTERNOON. THIS WOULD LOWER  
THE CRITICAL THREAT SOME, BUT THE POTENTIAL FOR DRY LIGHTNING WILL  
LINGER OVER WESTERN TO CENTRAL AREAS OF OF NM. OVERALL, CONDITIONS  
APPEAR TO STAY ELEVATED ACROSS ALL OF THE FORECAST AREA WITH  
HUMIDITY BEING A SLIGHT DETERRENT IN WESTERN ZONES AND WINDS  
ACTING AS THE LIMITER IN EASTERN AREAS.  
 
A STRETCH OF STRONGER WINDS WILL THEN IMPACT NM WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY,  
AND FRIDAY, FIRST WITH A SHORTWAVE TROUGH CROSSING NEAR THE NM-CO  
BORDER ON WEDNESDAY, FOLLOWED BY ANOTHER PACIFIC STORM SYSTEM THAT  
WILL CROSS FARTHER TO OUR NORTH, BUT STILL LEAVE US WITH A STOUT  
PRESSURE GRADIENT AND INCOMING COLD FRONT. MANY NORTHWESTERN TO  
NORTH CENTRAL ZONES ARE SLATED TO RECEIVE SOAKING RAINFALL TUESDAY  
NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY, BUT THIS WILL ALSO BE THE DAY OF HIGHEST WIND  
SPEEDS, PARTICULARLY ALONG AND EAST OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN.  
THERE WILL ALSO BE A FEW SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS IN THESE EASTERN  
ZONES THAT WILL KEEP HUMIDITY ELEVATED ABOVE TRADITIONAL THRESHOLDS  
FOR CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER. MUCH LOWER HUMIDITY RETURNS THURSDAY AS A  
DRY SLOT ALOFT AND WARMER TEMPERATURES ARRIVE, AND THIS WILL RAISE  
THE RISK FOR CRITICAL CONDITIONS, ESPECIALLY IN EASTERN NM ZONES.  
WINDS WILL STAY STRONG INTO FRIDAY, TURNING MORE WEST AND NORTHWEST  
AS THE PACIFIC FRONT ARRIVES. THE COOLER TEMPERATURES WILL LIKELY  
OFFSET THE THREAT OF CRITICAL CONDITIONS BEHIND THE FRONT, BUT  
EASTERN AREAS AHEAD OF IT WILL STILL BE AT RISK. A WELCOME RESPITE  
FROM THE WINDS IS THEN FORECAST TO RETURN THIS WEEKEND.  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
FARMINGTON...................... 46 72 47 62 / 10 20 70 80  
DULCE........................... 35 69 37 54 / 10 30 80 90  
CUBA............................ 40 69 40 58 / 20 20 60 80  
GALLUP.......................... 37 69 39 61 / 20 20 40 70  
EL MORRO........................ 40 66 41 57 / 20 30 50 60  
GRANTS.......................... 39 70 41 62 / 20 20 30 60  
QUEMADO......................... 41 69 44 61 / 40 30 50 60  
MAGDALENA....................... 47 72 50 65 / 30 10 30 40  
DATIL........................... 43 68 44 61 / 40 20 40 50  
RESERVE......................... 35 73 39 65 / 30 20 30 50  
GLENWOOD........................ 40 78 41 68 / 20 30 40 50  
CHAMA........................... 36 62 35 47 / 10 20 80 90  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 48 68 46 59 / 20 10 50 80  
PECOS........................... 41 71 40 59 / 20 10 40 70  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 41 65 41 54 / 5 10 40 70  
RED RIVER....................... 37 59 37 47 / 5 10 50 70  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 33 63 35 51 / 5 10 40 70  
TAOS............................ 37 70 39 58 / 10 5 40 70  
MORA............................ 42 68 40 59 / 10 10 30 60  
ESPANOLA........................ 43 75 44 65 / 10 10 50 80  
SANTA FE........................ 45 71 45 62 / 20 10 40 80  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 44 75 44 66 / 20 10 40 80  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 54 75 53 66 / 30 10 40 70  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 53 78 52 69 / 20 10 30 60  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 46 80 46 72 / 20 10 30 60  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 51 78 53 69 / 20 10 30 70  
BELEN........................... 46 81 50 73 / 30 10 30 60  
BERNALILLO...................... 49 78 51 68 / 20 10 40 70  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 44 79 46 72 / 30 10 30 60  
CORRALES........................ 50 78 50 69 / 20 10 40 70  
LOS LUNAS....................... 45 79 48 72 / 30 10 30 60  
PLACITAS........................ 53 74 52 65 / 20 10 40 70  
RIO RANCHO...................... 53 77 54 68 / 20 10 40 70  
SOCORRO......................... 52 82 55 74 / 20 10 30 40  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 49 70 48 61 / 30 10 50 70  
TIJERAS......................... 49 72 49 63 / 30 10 40 70  
EDGEWOOD........................ 47 71 47 63 / 20 10 30 70  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 39 74 40 65 / 20 10 30 60  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 44 71 42 60 / 20 5 30 60  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 46 74 47 65 / 30 5 30 60  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 46 73 46 65 / 20 10 20 50  
CARRIZOZO....................... 50 77 51 67 / 10 5 20 50  
RUIDOSO......................... 46 72 46 62 / 5 5 10 40  
CAPULIN......................... 42 71 42 64 / 0 10 10 30  
RATON........................... 39 75 40 66 / 0 10 20 40  
SPRINGER........................ 39 77 42 68 / 0 5 10 40  
LAS VEGAS....................... 44 73 43 62 / 10 5 20 50  
CLAYTON......................... 53 79 45 72 / 0 5 10 30  
ROY............................. 46 77 46 67 / 0 5 5 40  
CONCHAS......................... 49 85 50 76 / 0 0 5 30  
SANTA ROSA...................... 51 81 51 72 / 5 0 5 40  
TUCUMCARI....................... 51 87 49 78 / 0 0 0 30  
CLOVIS.......................... 52 87 52 77 / 10 0 0 30  
PORTALES........................ 49 88 49 80 / 10 0 0 30  
FORT SUMNER..................... 48 86 50 77 / 10 0 5 30  
ROSWELL......................... 52 89 53 81 / 10 5 0 20  
PICACHO......................... 50 82 51 74 / 10 5 5 30  
ELK............................. 46 79 47 70 / 0 5 5 30  
 
 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...52  
LONG TERM....52  
AVIATION...52  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NM Page
Main Text Page