771  
FXUS65 KABQ 191134 AAA  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
534 AM MDT TUE MAY 19 2026  
   
..NEW AVIATION
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
UPDATED AT 525 AM MDT TUE MAY 19 2026  
 
- THE THREAT OF RAPID FIRE SPREAD BECOMES MORE ISOLATED TO THE  
LOWER TO MIDDLE RIO GRANDE VALLEY THIS AFTERNOON.  
 
- STRAY ERRATIC AND GUSTY WINDS FROM VIRGA SHOWERS WILL IMPACT A  
FEW SPOTS ACROSS NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH-CENTRAL NM THIS AFTERNOON.  
 
- AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY INCREASES OVER EASTERN NEW  
MEXICO WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
 
(TODAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY)  
ISSUED AT 103 AM MDT TUE MAY 19 2026  
 
WHILE DRY SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS REMAIN OVER WESTERN NM, HIGHER  
MOISTURE ALONGSIDE NORTHEASTERLY TO EASTERLY WINDS RESIDES THROUGH  
EASTERN NM INTO PARTS OF THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY BRINGING A NICE  
CHANGE TO THE RECENT STRETCH OF CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS.  
 
THE STRONG JETMAX ROUNDING AN H5 LOW HAS EJECTED OUT OVER THE GREAT  
PLAINS LAST NIGHT WITH A LOITERING H5 SHORTWAVE TROUGH OVER UT/NV  
THIS MORNING. WHILE DRY SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW REMAINS ALOFT OVER THE  
DESERT SOUTHWEST, WINDS WILL NOT BE NEARLY AS STRONG AS WHAT WAS  
OBSERVED MONDAY. MEANWHILE, A POTENT COLD FRONT HAS BACKED  
SOUTHWESTWARD ACROSS EASTERN NM BRINGING GUSTY NORTHEASTERLY WINDS  
OF 35 TO 45 MPH TO AREAS FROM CLAYTON TO CLOVIS OVERNIGHT. THIS  
FRONT WILL BRING GUSTY EASTERLY TO SOUTHEASTERLY WINDS THRU THE GAPS  
OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN INTO SANTA FE AND ALBUQUERQUE AROUND  
SUNRISE THIS MORNING. GUSTS OF 25 TO 35 MPH CAN BE EXPECTED BEFORE  
WINDS VEER SOUTHERLY BY MID-DAY AND AFTERNOON, STAYING BREEZY TO  
WINDY ALL AFTERNOON. WHILE MOST AREAS WILL REMAIN DRY, THERE IS  
ENOUGH MOISTURE TO ALLOW FOR ISOLATED VIRGA SHOWERS TO DEVELOP OVER  
PORTIONS OF THE NORTHWESTERN HIGHLANDS ALONG THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE  
INTO THE TUSAS AND JEMEZ MTS LATE THIS AFTERNOON. STRAY AND ERRATIC  
GUSTY WINDS WITH LITTLE TO NO ACCOMPANYING RAINFALL WILL BE THE MAIN  
HAZARD FROM THIS, IMPACTING OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES IN THE AREA.  
 
TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY MORNING CONTINUES TO SEE NUMERICAL  
MODEL GUIDANCE ADVERTISING THE AFOREMENTIONED COLD FRONT THROUGH  
EASTERN NM WHICH HAD BEEN USHERED BACK STAGE EAST TOWARD TX/OK  
ADVANCE BACK WESTWARD THRU THE GAPS OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN  
INTO THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY. WITH THE LOITERING H5 SHORTWAVE STILL  
OVER UT AND NORTHERN AZ, SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT REMAINING OVER NM  
WILL AGAIN TRY TO SHARPEN A DRYLINE FEATURE SOMEWHERE N-S ALONG THE  
CENTRAL HIGHLANDS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. THERE REMAINS CONSIDERABLE  
FORECAST UNCERTAINTY REGARDING AFTERNOON CONVECTIVE POTENTIAL THRU  
EASTERN NM. THERE IS A CLEAR DEMARCATION BETWEEN THE MOIST  
CONTINENTAL AIRMASS BEHIND THE AFOREMENTIONED COLD FRONT AND THE  
MOIST MARITIME AIRMASS ASSOCIATED WITH SOUTHERLY RETURN FLOW FROM  
THE GULF ADVECTING NORTHWARD INTO THE PERMIAN BASIN AND SOUTHEASTERN  
NM AND THE TX PANHANDLE. THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY IS FIRING UP ALONG  
THIS SHARP SURFACE BOUNDARY OVER OK INTO THE TX PANHANDLE THIS HOUR.  
HOWEVER, THIS SURFACE BOUNDARY WILL BECOME MORE DIFFUSE BY WEDNESDAY  
THROUGH EASTERN NM, AND NUMERICAL MODEL GUIDANCE HAS A WIDE RANGE OF  
LATITUDINAL SOLUTIONS OF HOW FAR NORTH/SOUTH THE GULF MOISTURE  
REACHES INTO EASTERN NM WEDNESDAY. THIS YIELDS TWO SCENARIOS FOR  
MANY AREAS OF EAST-CENTRAL AND SOUTHEASTERN NM REGARDING  
THUNDERSTORM POTENTIAL. ONE BEING THE NAM SOLUTION WHICH FAVORS THE  
MORE STABLE CONTINENTAL AIRMASS FURTHER SOUTH WITH RELATIVELY LOWER  
TD'S IN THE 40S WITH PERHAPS JUST A FEW STRAY SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS ALONG A DRYLINE IMMEDIATELY EAST OF THE CENTRAL  
MOUNTAIN CHAIN. THE SECOND BEING A MORE CONVECTIVELY BULLISH  
SCENARIO FAVORED BY THE DETERMINISTIC GFS WHERE THE WARMER AND MORE  
UNSTABLE GULF MOISTURE IS FURTHER NORTH INTO EASTERN NM ALLOWING FOR  
SCATTERED TO POTENTIALLY NUMEROUS THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY FIRST  
BEGINNING ALONG THE DRYLINE OVER THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS OF NM BEFORE  
PROGRESSING EASTWARD TOWARD TX IN THE EVENING. IN FACT, THE SPC HAS  
ISSUED A CONDITIONALLY MARGINAL RISK FOR STRONG/SEVERE THUNDERSTORM  
ACTIVITY THRU THE SOUTHEASTERN QUADRANT OF THE STATE WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON. BOTTOM LINE, WEDNESDAY'S THUNDERSTORM POTENTIAL FOR  
EASTERN NM BOILS DOWN TO HOW FAR NORTH THE WARM MORE UNSTABLE GULF  
MOISTURE CAN PUSH.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM
 
 
(WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY)  
ISSUED AT 103 AM MDT TUE MAY 19 2026  
 
OUTFLOW FROM ANY THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY WEDNESDAY EVENING WILL PUSH  
LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE BACK WEST TO AND THRU THE GAPS OF THE CENTRAL  
MOUNTAIN CHAIN AGAIN. DRY WESTERLIES ADVANCE BACK EAST THURSDAY  
AFTERNOON AS THE LOITERING H5 TROUGH OVER UT FINALLY GETS ESCORTED  
OUT OF THE AREA AND MOVES ALONG EASTWARD OVER CO. THIS SHIFTS ANY  
THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY EASTWARD ALONG A SHARPENING DRYLINE FEATURE  
FAVORED CLOSE TO THE TX BORDER THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING.  
FRIDAY SEES CONTINUED DRY CONDITIONS WITH LIGHTER WINDS ACROSS  
WESTERN AND CENTRAL NM THANKS TO WEAKER FLOW ALOFT TO THE NORTHEAST  
OF A 575DM H5 LOW OVER THE NORTHERN BAJA PENINSULA. A COLD FRONT  
BACKING SOUTHWARD INTO NORTHEASTERN NM FROM CO WILL ADVANCE THRU  
EASTERN NM AND UP TO THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN SATURDAY. WITH A  
RIDGE OF HIGH PRESSURE BUILDING OVERHEAD, THIS WILL SET THE STAGE  
FOR DAILY ROUNDS OF AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY FAVORING  
DEVELOPMENT ALONG THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN FIRST. SUBSEQUENT  
OUTFLOW BOUNDARIES LOOK TO INITIATE SECONDARY CONVECTION LATER IN  
THE DAY AND EVENING THRU CENTRAL AND EASTERN NM, WITH MOISTURE  
STEADILY INCREASING PRECIPITATION CHANCES A BIT FURTHER WEST EACH  
DAY INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
(12Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 525 AM MDT TUE MAY 19 2026  
 
A COLD FRONT HAS ADVANCED THRU EASTERN NM BRINGING GUSTY  
NORTHEASTERLY WINDS 15 TO 25 MPH THIS HOUR. IT WILL PUSH THRU THE  
GAPS OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN TO KSAF AND KABQ BY 13Z TO 14Z  
BRINGING GUSTY WINDS OF 20-30KTS. PATCHY IFR/MVFR CEILINGS HAVE  
ALSO DEVELOPED ALONG THE EAST SLOPES OF THE SANGRE DE CRISTO MTS  
AND CENTRAL HIGHLANDS. THESE CEILINGS WILL CLEAR THIS MORNING AS  
SOUTHERLY TO SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS PICK UP THRU WESTERN AND CENTRAL  
NM. NORTHEASTERLY WINDS THROUGH EASTERN NM WILL QUICKLY VEER  
EASTERLY BY LATE MORNING AND SOUTHEASTERLY THIS AFTERNOON. MOST  
AREAS WILL SEE GUSTS REACHING 20-35KTS THIS AFTERNOON, WITH A FEW  
SPOTS THROUGH NORTHWESTERN NM FAVORING THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE AND  
THE JEMEZ MTS NEAR KLAM SEEING ERRATIC STRONG GUSTS FROM VIRGA  
SHOWERS. VIRGA INDUCED ERRATIC GUSTY WINDS COULD REACH KSAF BUT  
CONFIDENCE WAS TOO LOW TO INCLUDE MENTION OF THIS AT THIS TIME. AS  
WINDS OVERALL TAPER OFF MOST AREAS LATE THIS EVENING, THE COLD  
FRONT ACROSS EASTERN NM WILL HAVE BEEN PUSHED BACK TOWARD TX,  
ADVANCING WESTWARD AGAIN AND THROUGH THE GAPS OF THE CENTRAL  
MOUNTAIN CHAIN LATE THIS EVENING AND TONIGHT. THIS WILL PRODUCE  
ANOTHER EAST CANYON WIND AT KSAF, AND POTENTIALLY AGAIN AT KABQ.  
HOW IT MOVES AROUND THE SANDIA MTS WILL DETERMINE THAT HOWEVER.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 103 AM MDT TUE MAY 19 2026  
 
WHILE A COLD FRONT HAS BROUGHT A SIGNIFICANT UPTICK IN MOISTURE  
ALONGSIDE NORTHEASTERLY WINDS VEERING SOUTHEASTERLY LATER TODAY  
THROUGH EASTERN NM, DRIER SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS WILL REMAIN ALONG AND  
WEST OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN. THE EXCEPTION WILL BE EARLY THIS  
MORNING WHEN THE AFOREMENTIONED COLD FRONT BRIEFLY SURGES THRU THE  
GAPS OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN INTO THE MIDDLE RIO GRANDE VALLEY  
INTO SANTA FE AND ABQ. ANY LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE INCREASE FROM THIS  
WILL BE QUICKLY USHERED BACK OUT BY THE INCREASING DRY SOUTHWESTERLY  
WINDS. PREVAILING WINDS WILL BE CONSIDERABLY LESS THAN WHAT WAS  
OBSERVED MONDAY, BUT STILL STRONG ENOUGH TO COMBINE WITH HUMIDITY  
FALLING BELOW 10 PERCENT TO PRODUCE CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS  
INTO THE MIDDLE RIO GRANDE VALLEY AND NEARBY SOUTH-CENTRAL HIGHLANDS  
SOUTH OF THE MANZANO MOUNTAINS FOR SEVERAL HOURS THIS AFTERNOON.  
THIS HAS WARRANTED THE ISSUANCE OF A RED FLAG WARNING FOR THE MIDDLE  
RIO GRANDE VALLEY THIS AFTERNOON AND EARLY EVENING. A SIMILAR SETUP  
IS FAVORED WEDNESDAY IN THIS AREA, AND YET ANOTHER RED FLAG WARNING  
FOCUSED ON THE SOUTHERN HALF OF THE MIDDLE RIO GRANDE VALLEY WILL  
HAVE TO BE EVALUATED.  
 
EASTERN NM SEES THE AFOREMENTIONED COLD FRONT BRINGING LOWER  
TEMPERATURES AND HIGHER HUMIDITY USHERED BACK EAST TOWARD TX THIS  
AFTERNOON. THE HIGHER MOISTURE ADVANCES WEST EACH NIGHT, GETTING  
USHERED BACK EAST TOWARD TX EACH AFTERNOON TODAY THROUGH THURSDAY.  
ANY AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY THRU EASTERN NM WILL FAVOR AREAS  
ALONG A SHARPENING DRYLINE, ALTHOUGH THERE IS CONSIDERABLE  
UNCERTAINTY REGARDING THUNDERSTORM COVERAGE WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY  
AFTERNOON.  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
FARMINGTON...................... 76 44 76 42 / 0 5 0 0  
DULCE........................... 71 36 73 31 / 10 10 10 0  
CUBA............................ 73 42 74 39 / 10 10 5 0  
GALLUP.......................... 74 37 74 35 / 0 0 0 0  
EL MORRO........................ 73 43 72 41 / 10 5 0 0  
GRANTS.......................... 78 42 77 39 / 10 5 0 0  
QUEMADO......................... 75 44 75 41 / 0 0 0 0  
MAGDALENA....................... 78 52 78 49 / 0 0 0 0  
DATIL........................... 75 48 74 45 / 0 0 0 0  
RESERVE......................... 78 42 79 39 / 0 0 0 0  
GLENWOOD........................ 83 45 84 43 / 0 0 0 0  
CHAMA........................... 65 36 66 33 / 10 30 20 5  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 71 51 71 49 / 10 10 20 10  
PECOS........................... 71 43 70 43 / 10 10 30 30  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 68 42 69 41 / 10 30 20 10  
RED RIVER....................... 59 35 59 34 / 10 40 30 10  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 63 30 64 30 / 10 30 40 20  
TAOS............................ 71 39 73 36 / 10 20 20 10  
MORA............................ 67 41 66 42 / 10 30 30 40  
ESPANOLA........................ 79 48 79 45 / 10 10 20 10  
SANTA FE........................ 73 49 72 47 / 10 10 20 10  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 75 47 75 45 / 10 10 20 10  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 81 55 81 54 / 10 10 10 0  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 82 54 83 52 / 10 10 10 0  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 84 52 84 49 / 10 10 5 0  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 83 54 84 52 / 10 10 5 0  
BELEN........................... 86 50 86 47 / 0 0 0 0  
BERNALILLO...................... 83 53 83 51 / 10 10 10 0  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 85 49 85 46 / 5 5 5 0  
CORRALES........................ 84 54 85 51 / 10 10 10 0  
LOS LUNAS....................... 85 50 86 47 / 0 5 5 0  
PLACITAS........................ 79 54 78 52 / 10 10 10 5  
RIO RANCHO...................... 83 54 84 51 / 10 10 10 0  
SOCORRO......................... 87 56 87 54 / 0 0 0 0  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 76 50 75 48 / 10 5 20 5  
TIJERAS......................... 78 50 76 48 / 10 5 20 5  
EDGEWOOD........................ 77 46 75 44 / 10 5 20 5  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 78 42 77 40 / 5 5 20 5  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 70 44 68 45 / 0 10 30 20  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 78 46 78 44 / 0 0 10 0  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 77 48 78 46 / 0 0 10 0  
CARRIZOZO....................... 81 54 82 53 / 0 0 10 0  
RUIDOSO......................... 73 52 71 50 / 0 5 20 5  
CAPULIN......................... 62 35 59 40 / 5 20 30 40  
RATON........................... 67 41 65 42 / 5 20 30 50  
SPRINGER........................ 69 41 66 43 / 0 30 30 40  
LAS VEGAS....................... 66 44 64 44 / 10 30 30 50  
CLAYTON......................... 66 42 61 46 / 0 20 30 50  
ROY............................. 68 42 62 45 / 0 30 30 50  
CONCHAS......................... 75 47 69 48 / 0 30 40 40  
SANTA ROSA...................... 76 47 68 47 / 0 30 30 40  
TUCUMCARI....................... 75 48 70 51 / 0 20 40 40  
CLOVIS.......................... 76 50 68 52 / 0 20 40 30  
PORTALES........................ 77 50 70 51 / 0 20 40 30  
FORT SUMNER..................... 79 50 72 50 / 0 20 50 30  
ROSWELL......................... 85 57 77 56 / 0 20 30 30  
PICACHO......................... 83 51 77 50 / 0 10 30 10  
ELK............................. 83 49 80 48 / 0 5 30 10  
 

 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
RED FLAG WARNING FROM NOON TODAY TO 7 PM MDT THIS EVENING FOR  
NMZ106.  
 

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...24  
LONG TERM....24  
AVIATION...24  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NM Page Main Text Page