961  
FXUS65 KABQ 292350 AAA  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
550 PM MDT SUN MAR 29 2026  
   
..NEW AVIATION
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
UPDATED AT 524 PM MDT SUN MAR 29 2026  
 
- GUSTY SHOWERS MAY PRODUCE ERRATIC WIND GUSTS IN FAR WESTERN NEW  
MEXICO THROUGH THE EVENING, THEN IN WESTERN AND CENTRAL NEW  
MEXICO ON MONDAY AND TUESDAY. DRY STORMS MAY CAUSE NEW FIRE  
STARTS MONDAY AND TUESDAY AFTERNOONS.  
 
- INCREASING CHANCES FOR BENEFICIAL, BUT LIGHT, RAIN AND HIGH  
MOUNTAIN SNOW LATE TUESDAY AND WEDENESDAY.  
 
- WEST WINDS TREND STRONGER THIS WEEK. THERE IS A MODERATE  
(30-50%) CHANCE OF AN INCREASED THREAT OF RAPID FIRE SPREAD IN  
EASTERN NEW MEXICO MONDAY, WITH HIGHER CHANCES THURSDAY AND  
FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
 
(THIS EVENING THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 136 PM MDT SUN MAR 29 2026  
 
GEOPOTENTIAL HEIGHTS ARE STARTING TO DECREASE SOME TODAY WITH THE  
CENTER OF HIGH PRESSURE ALOFT SHIFTING FARTHER SOUTHEAST OF NM.  
STILL, A PLETHORA OF NEAR TO RECORD-BREAKING HIGH TEMPERATURES ARE  
IN THE WORKS FOR THIS AFTERNOON AS HEIGHTS ARE STILL 1 TO 2 STANDARD  
DEVIATIONS ABOVE CLIMATOLOGY FOR LATE MARCH. OUR LEE-SIDE SURFACE  
TROUGH WILL REAPPEAR EAST OF THE FRONT RANGE THIS AFTERNOON, LEADING  
TO DOWNSLOPING AND COMPRESSIONAL WARMING IN THE EASTERN ZONES WHILE  
A WESTERLY COMPONENT PREVAILS IN WESTERN ZONES AS WELL. A SUBTLE AND  
ILL-DEFINED UPPER TROUGH IS PUSHING TOWARD THE BAJA, AND MID TO HIGH  
LEVEL MOISTURE IS PRECEDING IT AND WORKING TOWARD WESTERN NM. THIS  
HAS ALREADY TRANSPIRED INTO HIGH-BASED SHOWERS AND EVEN LOW-TOPPED  
CONVECTION OVER SONORA, CHIHUAHUA, AND AZ OVER THE PAST 18 HOURS,  
AND SOME OF THIS ACTIVITY WILL STRUGGLE TO CREEP INTO OUR WESTERN  
ZONES THROUGH THE EVENING. ODDS OF OBSERVING LIGHTNING STRIKES ARE  
QUITE LOW, SO THE MENTION OF DRY STORMS/LIGHTNING WERE KEPT OUT OF  
THE FORECAST WITH BETTER CHANCES ON MONDAY. BROKEN CIRRUS AND  
SCATTERED MID LEVEL ALTOCU/ALTOSTRATUS WILL KEEP OVERNIGHT LOWS MILD  
AND RELATIVELY WARM TONIGHT.  
 
THE LEE-SIDE SURFACE TROUGH DEEPENS ON MONDAY (~997-999 MB), AND 700  
MB WINDS INCREASE SLIGHTLY TO 20 TO 25 KT. THIS WILL INCREASE  
SURFACE WINDS SLIGHTLY WITH PROGNOSTICATIONS OF DEEP VERTICAL MIXING  
ON MONDAY, EVEN WITH PERIODIC BROKEN MID TO HIGH CLOUD COVER AS THE  
BAJA TROUGH MOVES INLAND OVER THE SIERRA MADRE OCCIDENTAL AND OTHER  
SOUTHERN CHAINS OF THE ROCKIES. INCREASED TEMPERATURE LAPSE RATES  
(LI'S TO 0 OF -3 C) WILL INCREASE CHANCES FOR HIGH-BASED SHOWERS  
AND THUNDERSTORMS IN WESTERN ZONES MONDAY AFTERNOON WITH ACTIVITY  
CONGEALING AND DIMINISHING OVER CENTRAL ZONES THROUGH THE EVENING  
HOURS. NBM POPS WERE STILL QUITE HIGH, AND THESE WERE REDUCED AND  
TEMPERED SLIGHTLY, AS THE FOOTPRINTS OF MEASURABLE RAINFALL SHOULD  
BE QUITE SMALL AND ISOLATED GIVEN THE INVERTED-V PROFILES  
CHARACTERIZED BY HIGH LCL'S AND STILL A VERY DRY BOUNDARY LAYER.  
GUSTY WINDS AND LIGHTNING WILL LIKELY BE THE BIGGER IMPACTS, AS  
EVAPORATIVE COOLING POTENTIAL IS VERY LARGE AND DCAPE VALUES COULD  
EXCEED 500 TO 1000 J/KG IN MANY WESTERN AND CENTRAL ZONES.  
DAYTIME HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL REDUCE BY A COUPLE TO A FEW DEGREES  
IN WESTERN ZONES DUE TO INCREASING CLOUDS AND SHOWERS, BUT ALL  
AREAS SHOULD STILL RUN 10 TO 20 DEGREES ABOVE AVERAGE AGAIN MONDAY  
AFTERNOON. OVERNIGHT LOW TEMPERATURES MONDAY NIGHT WILL BE EVEN  
MILDER/WARMER THAN TONIGHT.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM
 
 
(TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY)  
ISSUED AT 136 PM MDT SUN MAR 29 2026  
 
A COLD FRONT IS MODELED TO SLIDE DOWN THE PLAINS TUESDAY, BUT LATEST  
GUIDANCE SUGGESTS IT WILL GET HELD UP IN UNION COUNTY, NOT MAKING  
MUCH HEADWAY INTO THE STATE THROUGH THE AFTERNOON. THIS POSES SOME  
UNCERTAINTY WITH TEMPERATURES IN FAR NORTHEASTERN NM, BUT A FEW TO  
SEVERAL DEGREES OF COOLING DOES LOOK TO IMPACT CLAYTON AND VICINITY.  
THIS FRONT WILL DISRUPT THE LEE-SIDE SURFACE CYCLONE, LOWERING WIND  
SPEEDS SOME IN NORTHEASTERN ZONES WHILE BREEZY TO LOW-END WINDY  
CONDITIONS REDEVELOP ELSEWHERE. THE 700 MB WINDS REACH 25 TO 35 KT  
OVER NORTHWESTERN ZONES WHICH WOULD BE A LIKELY SURFACE GUST OUTCOME  
TUESDAY. SUBTLE, MESOSCALE PERTURBATIONS WILL BE EMBEDDED IN THE  
WEST SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT, AND THIS WILL KEEP ISOLATED SHOWERS  
AND THUNDERSTORMS GOING TUESDAY WITH THE HIGHLAND ZONES BEING THE  
MOST LIKELY TO RECEIVE MEASURABLE RAIN.  
 
ON WEDNESDAY, MODELS ARE COMING INTO BETTER CONSENSUS WITH THE NEXT  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH PASSAGE OVER NORTHERN NM AND THE ASSOCIATED RAIN  
AND HIGH MOUNTAIN SNOW THAT WILL FAVOR NORTH CENTRAL ZONES. A  
DISTINCT THERMAL TROUGH IS PROJECTED WITH THIS FEATURE, INDICATING  
IT WILL HAVE MORE DYNAMICAL FORCING FOR PRECIPITATION, BUT THE  
WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY WILL BE BRIEF AND FLEETING. BLENDED QPF  
SUGGESTS NORTH CENTRAL ZONES WOULD RECEIVE BETWEEN 0.1 AND 0.25 INCH  
QPF WITH HIGH PEAKS NEAR THE NM-CO BORDER SQUEEZING OUT 0.5 INCH OR  
MORE OF LIQUID EQUIVALENT, TRANSLATING TO A COUPLE TO A FEW INCHES  
OF SNOW ABOVE 9KFT. HIGHER RESOLUTION MODELS SUCH AS THE NAM AND NEW  
RRFS DO INDICATE SOME CONVECTION ALONG THE PACIFIC FRONT DURING THE  
MID DAY TIME FRAME WITH THE RRFS CARRYING ACTIVITY INTO SOUTH  
CENTRAL TO EAST CENTRAL ZONES. WINDS WILL ALSO HAVE TO BE WATCHED,  
AS MANY CENTRAL TO NORTHEASTERN ZONES COULD ENCROACH UPON THE 50 MPH  
WIND GUST CRITERIA FOR A WIND ADVISORY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
A CLOSED LOW THEN MOVES INLAND OVER THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST STATES  
THURSDAY AND THEN INTO THE CENTRAL TO NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS BY LATE  
FRIDAY. WHILE DETAILS CONTINUE TO GET HASHED OUT ON THE EXACT TRACK  
AND DEPTH OF THIS FEATURE, IT LOOKS TO CROSS NORTH OF NM, OFFERING A  
DRY SLOT OVER NM THURSDAY BEFORE A DRY PACIFIC FRONT ARRIVES FRIDAY.  
THIS SCENARIO WILL FAVOR WIDESPREAD BREEZY TO WINDY CONDITIONS EACH  
DAY. TEMPERATURES WOULD BUMP UP THURSDAY, ONLY TO START DECREASING  
LATE FRIDAY AND INTO SATURDAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
(00Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 544 PM MDT SUN MAR 29 2026  
 
VFR CONDITIONS WILL PREVAIL THROUGH AT LEAST MONDAY MORNING. A FEW  
VIRGA SHOWERS MAY RESULT IN GUSTY AND ERRATIC WINDS THROUGH THE  
EVENING ACROSS SOUTHWEST AND WEST CENTRAL NM. MID AND UPPER LEVEL  
MOISTURE ADVECTING INTO NM WILL INCREASE MID AND HIGH CLOUDS OVER  
THE NEXT 24 HOURS. MORE COVERAGE OF VIRGA OR LIGHT RAIN SHOWERS  
WILL IMPACT WESTERN AND CENTRAL NM MONDAY AFTERNOON. ENOUGH  
INSTABILITY EXISTS FOR A FEW THUNDERSTORMS AS WELL. GUSTY AND  
ERRATIC WINDS MAY ACCOMPANY ANY SHOWER OR THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY.  
THESE WINDS MAY RESULT IN LOCALIZED BLOWING DUST AND BRIEF  
REDUCTIONS IN VISIBILITY.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 136 PM MDT SUN MAR 29 2026  
 
CONCERNS THROUGH THE EVENING WILL CENTER AROUND NEAR TO RECORD-  
BREAKING HIGH TEMPERATURES, VERY WIDESPREAD LOW HUMIDITY (BUT  
ESPECIALLY IN THE EASTERN PLAINS), WIDESPREAD BREEZY CONDITIONS, AND  
A LOW THREAT FOR GUSTY VIRGA (EVAPORATING RAIN) SHOWERS IN WESTERN  
ZONES. THESE CONCERNS WILL FADE THROUGH THE EVENING.  
 
INTO MONDAY, BREEZY TO WINDY CONDITIONS WILL RETURN TO MUCH OF  
NORTHERN NM WITH LOW HUMIDITY BLANKETING EASTERN ZONES CONTRASTED BY  
VERY MINOR INCREASES IN WESTERN AREAS. THE FIRE WEATHER WATCH FOR  
NORTHEASTERN ZONES WILL CONTINUE WITH CONFIDENCE LOWERING THAT THE  
WIND CRITERIA WILL BE MET. IN WESTERN ZONES, AN INCREASED THREAT FOR  
GUSTY SHOWERS AND DRY LIGHTNING WILL DEVELOP AS MID TO UPPER LEVEL  
MOISTURE CONTINUES TO FEED INTO THE AREA.  
 
ON TUESDAY, WINDS WILL INCREASE A BIT MORE, PARTICULARLY OVER  
NORTHERN ZONES WITH MORE AREAS PRONE TO OBSERVE GUSTS OF 30 TO 35  
MPH. HUMIDITY WILL BE INCREASING TO A 15 TO 20% RANGE TUESDAY  
AFTERNOON, SO THIS WILL AGAIN MAKE THE POTENTIAL FOR CRITICAL  
CONDITIONS MARGINAL WITH HUMIDITY BEING THE LIMITER ON THIS DAY. A  
CONTINUED THREAT FOR DRY LIGHTNING WILL EXIST ON TUESDAY WITH STORMS  
MOVING MORE INTO THE INTERIOR, OR CENTRAL AREAS OF OF NM.  
 
A WINDY PERIOD IS THEN SHAPING UP FOR WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, AND  
FRIDAY WITH OTHER WEATHER ELEMENTS VARYING AND CHANGING DAY-BY-DAY.  
WEDNESDAY'S HIGHEST WINDS WILL BE FOUND ALONG AND EAST OF THE  
CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN, BUT ATTENDANT SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS  
ASSOCIATED WITH A SHORTWAVE TROUGH PASSAGE WILL KEEP HUMIDITY  
ELEVATED ABOVE TRADITIONAL THRESHOLDS FOR CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER.  
THIS WILL CHANGE INTO THURSDAY AS A DRY SLOT ALOFT AND WARMER  
TEMPERATURES DEVELOP, LIKELY LEADING TO AN INCREASED THREAT FOR  
CRITICAL CONDITIONS, ESPECIALLY IN EASTERN NM ZONES. WINDY  
CONDITIONS ON FRIDAY WILL THEN BE COMPLICATED BY THE ARRIVAL OF A  
DRY PACIFIC FRONT LATE IN THE DAY, AND THE TIMING OF THIS FRONT WILL  
LIKELY DICTATE HOW DIRE THE THREAT IS FOR CRITICAL CONDITIONS.  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
FARMINGTON...................... 44 78 47 74 / 0 10 20 10  
DULCE........................... 33 74 35 70 / 0 10 30 20  
CUBA............................ 39 73 40 69 / 0 20 30 20  
GALLUP.......................... 36 74 41 71 / 0 30 40 10  
EL MORRO........................ 41 69 43 67 / 0 40 40 10  
GRANTS.......................... 39 73 41 71 / 0 30 20 10  
QUEMADO......................... 43 70 44 70 / 5 40 40 20  
MAGDALENA....................... 48 73 48 72 / 5 30 20 20  
DATIL........................... 45 69 45 68 / 5 30 30 20  
RESERVE......................... 38 75 37 73 / 10 40 20 20  
GLENWOOD........................ 42 81 42 78 / 10 30 10 30  
CHAMA........................... 35 67 35 62 / 0 10 30 20  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 49 71 48 68 / 0 20 20 20  
PECOS........................... 41 74 42 71 / 0 10 20 10  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 40 70 40 65 / 0 10 20 20  
RED RIVER....................... 36 62 37 58 / 0 10 20 20  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 29 66 36 62 / 0 10 20 30  
TAOS............................ 33 74 36 70 / 0 10 20 10  
MORA............................ 41 72 42 68 / 0 10 10 20  
ESPANOLA........................ 41 78 43 75 / 0 10 20 20  
SANTA FE........................ 44 74 45 72 / 0 20 20 20  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 41 77 44 76 / 0 20 20 10  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 52 77 52 76 / 0 20 20 10  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 53 80 53 79 / 0 20 20 10  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 43 82 46 81 / 0 20 20 10  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 49 81 50 79 / 0 20 20 10  
BELEN........................... 44 82 47 81 / 0 20 20 10  
BERNALILLO...................... 47 81 49 78 / 0 20 20 10  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 41 81 44 80 / 0 20 20 10  
CORRALES........................ 47 82 49 80 / 0 20 20 10  
LOS LUNAS....................... 43 81 46 80 / 0 20 20 10  
PLACITAS........................ 51 77 51 75 / 0 20 20 10  
RIO RANCHO...................... 50 80 51 78 / 0 20 20 10  
SOCORRO......................... 51 83 51 82 / 5 20 20 10  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 51 73 48 71 / 0 20 30 10  
TIJERAS......................... 50 74 48 72 / 0 20 30 10  
EDGEWOOD........................ 46 75 46 73 / 0 10 30 10  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 36 77 40 75 / 0 10 20 10  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 44 74 44 71 / 0 5 20 10  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 46 76 45 74 / 0 10 20 10  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 45 76 46 73 / 0 10 10 10  
CARRIZOZO....................... 50 81 49 77 / 0 5 5 20  
RUIDOSO......................... 45 75 46 71 / 0 10 10 10  
CAPULIN......................... 39 75 43 68 / 0 5 0 20  
RATON........................... 36 79 40 72 / 0 5 0 20  
SPRINGER........................ 37 81 41 75 / 0 5 0 10  
LAS VEGAS....................... 44 77 44 72 / 0 5 5 10  
CLAYTON......................... 50 85 53 77 / 5 5 0 10  
ROY............................. 45 81 47 75 / 0 5 0 10  
CONCHAS......................... 44 89 49 84 / 0 5 0 5  
SANTA ROSA...................... 46 84 51 80 / 0 5 0 5  
TUCUMCARI....................... 48 91 51 85 / 0 0 5 5  
CLOVIS.......................... 50 91 52 86 / 0 0 10 5  
PORTALES........................ 47 91 49 87 / 0 5 10 5  
FORT SUMNER..................... 44 89 48 85 / 0 5 10 5  
ROSWELL......................... 49 91 51 89 / 0 10 10 5  
PICACHO......................... 50 84 50 82 / 0 20 10 10  
ELK............................. 47 82 47 79 / 0 20 10 10  
 

 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
FIRE WEATHER WATCH FROM MONDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH MONDAY EVENING  
FOR NMZ104-123.  
 

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...52  
LONG TERM....52  
AVIATION...34  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NM Page Main Text Page