476  
FXUS65 KABQ 311147 AAA  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
547 AM MDT TUE MAR 31 2026  
   
..NEW AVIATION
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
UPDATED AT 538 AM MDT TUE MAR 31 2026  
 
- A MIXTURE OF WET AND DRY STORMS IN WESTERN AND CENTRAL NEW  
MEXICO TODAY MAY PRODUCE ERRATIC DOWNBURST WIND GUSTS. DRY  
STORMS MAY CAUSE NEW FIRE STARTS WITH PATCHY BLOWING DUST.  
 
- BENEFICIAL LIGHT RAIN AND HIGH MOUNTAIN SNOW ARRIVE LATE TODAY  
AND WEDNESDAY, WITH PRECIPITATION FAVORING NORTHERN NEW MEXICO.  
 
- STRONG WEST WINDS WEDNESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY WILL CREATE HAZARDOUS  
CROSSWINDS FOR HIGH PROFILE VEHICLES, ESPECIALLY OVER EASTERN  
NEW MEXICO. INCREASING LIKELIHOOD OF CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER  
CONDITIONS RETURNS TO EASTERN NEW MEXICO THURSDAY AND FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
 
(TODAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY)  
ISSUED AT 115 AM MDT TUE MAR 31 2026  
 
AN UPPER LEVEL TROUGH AND ASSOCIATED TAP OF SUBTROPICAL MOISTURE  
WILL APPROACH FROM THE WEST THRU TONIGHT. TOP-DOWN MOISTENING WILL  
CONTINUE WITH INCREASING COVERAGE OF WET/DRY SHOWERS AND STORMS  
ACROSS WESTERN NM TODAY. MODEL DCAPES ARE STILL PROJECTED AT 400  
TO 800 J/KG SO GUSTY AND ERRATIC DOWNBURST WIND GUSTS ARE STILL  
POSSIBLE. IMPROVING LARGE-SCALE ASCENT WITH A 95-105KT SPEED MAX  
ENTERING NORTHWEST NM TONIGHT ALONG WITH PWATS RISING TO BETWEEN  
0.50 AND 0.70" WILL PROVIDE MORE EFFICIENT PRECIP PROCESSES AND  
MORE WIDESPREAD SHOWERS AND ISOLATED STORMS OVER NORTHERN AND  
WESTERN NM. THE LATEST 00Z HREF AND REFS PROBS OF QPF >0.25" BY  
6AM WEDNESDAY AVERAGE >80% OVER THE NORTHWEST HIGH TERRAIN WHILE  
THE NBM IS IN THE 40-60% RANGE. THE NBM CATCHES UP WITH THE HIGHER  
PROBS WEDNESDAY AS THE MAIN JET ENERGY AND ASSOCIATED PACIFIC  
COLD FRONT SURGES SOUTH AND EAST ACROSS NM. TOTAL QPF FROM WPC  
WITH CLOSE AGREEMENT FROM AIGFS AND ECMWF-AIFS SHOW 0.75-1.25"  
ACROSS THE NORTHWEST HIGH TERRAIN WITH VALUES DECREASING FARTHER  
SOUTH AND EAST INTO CENTRAL NM. HI-RES MODELS ARE SHOWING THE  
TYPICAL HIGHER VALUES >1.25" ON WEST-FACING SLOPES ACROSS THE  
NORTH AND WEST. SNOW LEVELS ARE ALSO HIGH WITH THIS SYSTEM AND  
RATIOS WILL PROMOTE A WETTER TYPE ACCUM OF 5-10" ABOVE 9,000 FEET  
(MAINLY THE SAN JUAN/TUSAS RANGES). NBM, HREF, AND REFS 50TH  
PERCENTILE ACCUMS ARE SUPPORTIVE OF A WINTER WX ADVISORY BUT THE  
LATEST WSSI (WINTER STORM SEVERITY INDEX) BARELY SHOWS MINOR  
IMPACTS AND NOT EVEN IN THE RURAL POPULATION AREAS.  
 
SOUTHWEST WINDS WILL BECOME STRONG ALONG AND EAST OF THE CENTRAL  
MT CHAIN WEDNESDAY AS THE PACIFIC FRONT SURGES EAST WITH 700MB  
WINDS NEAR 50KT AND A SURFACE LOW NEAR 990MB OVER SOUTHEAST CO.  
THE HREF AND REFS PROB WIND GUSTS >40 MPH AVERAGE 70-90% ALONG  
THE EAST SLOPES OF THE CENTRAL MT CHAIN AND PARTS OF THE EAST-  
CENTRAL AND NORTHEAST PLAINS. THESE PROBS DECREASE REMARKABLY FOR  
GUSTS >45 MPH SO CONFIDENCE DECREASES ON WIND ADVISORIES AT THIS  
TIME. HOWEVER, MOS GUIDANCE IS STILL PLENTY STRONG WITH GREATER  
COVERAGE OF WIND ADVISORY AND EVEN SOME LOCAL HIGH WIND WARNING  
AROUND QUAY, HARDING, AND EASTERN SAN MIGUEL COUNTY. HIGH TEMPS  
TODAY AHEAD OF THE PACIFIC COLD FRONT WILL AVERAGE 5-15F ABOVE  
NORMAL THEN CLOSER TO NORMAL BEHIND THE FRONT WEDNESDAY.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM
 
 
(WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY)  
ISSUED AT 115 AM MDT TUE MAR 31 2026  
 
VERY DRY AND FAST QUASI-ZONAL FLOW WILL DEVELOP IN THE WAKE OF THE  
PACIFIC STORM SYSTEM THURSDAY. ANOTHER DAY OF STRONG WEST WINDS  
IS EXPECTED BUT WITH LOWER PROBABILITIES FOR WIND ADVISORIES OVER  
THE EASTERN PLAINS. IT WILL BE VERY DRY SO THE RISK OF FIRE SPREAD  
RETURNS. A STRONGER PACIFIC COLD FRONT IS SHOWN SURGING THRU THE  
REGION FRIDAY WITH BLUSTERY NORTHWEST WINDS AND MUCH COOLER TEMPS  
FRIDAY NIGHT AND SATURDAY. THERE ARE HIGH CHANCES FOR A HARD  
FREEZE ACROSS MUCH OF NORTHERN AND WESTERN NM FRIDAY NIGHT WITH  
TEENS AND 20S LIKELY.  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST GUIDANCE SHOWS A RIDGE OF HIGH PRESSURE BUILDING  
WEST OF NM AGAIN SUNDAY AND MONDAY. SURFACE WINDS VEER AROUND TO  
THE SOUTH THRU THIS PERIOD BUT THERE ARE DIFFERENCES SHOWING UP  
WITH REGARD TO MOISTURE RETURNING TO THE REGION. THE GFS IS THE  
MORE "MOIST" SOLUTION WITH SURFACE DEWPOINTS INCREASING INTO THE  
20S AND 30S WHILE THE ECMWF IS DRIER WITH DEWPOINTS IN THE SINGLE  
DIGITS. EITHER WAY, THE LIKELY OUTCOME IS THAT TEMPS WILL WARM  
ABOVE NORMAL AGAIN WITH RELATIVELY LIGHT WINDS SUNDAY AND MONDAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
(12Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 538 AM MDT TUE MAR 31 2026  
 
AREAS OF TURBULENCE THIS MORNING WILL GIVE WAY TO INCREASING WEST  
WIND GUSTS OF 20-30KT AFTER 12PM. HIGH-BASED SHOWERS AND ISOLATED  
TS WILL DEVELOP OVER CENTRAL AND WESTERN NM AFTER 1PM THEN MOVE  
EAST NEAR 30KT WITH ERRATIC, DOWNBURST WINDS POSSIBLE. ACTIVITY  
WILL BECOME WETTER AS THE DAY PROGRESSES ACROSS WESTERN NM AND  
BECOME MORE WIDESPREAD OVER NORTHERN AND CENTRAL NM THRU MIDNIGHT.  
THERE IS A 20-40% OF MVFR CIGS FROM NEAR KFMN TO KGUP TONIGHT  
WITH AN EVEN HIGHER CHANCE OF IFR CIGS AND MT OBSCURATIONS OVER  
THE HIGHER TERRAIN.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 115 AM MDT TUE MAR 31 2026  
 
A MIX OF WET/DRY SHOWERS AND STORMS IS EXPECTED TODAY ACROSS  
NORTHERN AND WESTERN NM AS A PACIFIC STORM SYSTEM APPROACHES FROM  
THE WEST. DEEPER MOISTURE ENTERING THE AREA TONIGHT WILL ALLOW  
FOR MORE WIDESPREAD WETTING PRECIP WITH MUCH NEEDED RAIN AND VERY  
HIGH TERRAIN SNOW LIKELY ACROSS THE NORTH AND WEST TONIGHT AND  
WEDNESDAY. TOTAL QPF VALUES OF 0.75-1.25" ARE LIKELY FOR THE SAN  
JUAN, TUSAS, AND CHUSKA MTS WITH ROUGHLY 0.25 TO 0.50" IN THE  
SANGRE DE CRISTO, JEMEZ, AND ZUNI/SAN MATEO MTS. PRECIP VALUES  
DECREASE FARTHER SOUTH AND EAST BUT EVEN THE SANDIA/MANZANO MTS  
MAY PICK UP 0.10 TO 0.25". STRONG WEST WINDS WILL ALSO IMPACT  
EASTERN NM WEDNESDAY BUT RELATIVE HUMIDITY MAY REMAIN ABOVE 20%  
WITH WIDESPREAD CLOUD COVER. WE HAVE SEEN FIRE STARTS EVEN IN THE  
WAKE OF COLD FRONTS WITH CLOUD COVER SO THE WIND COMPONENT MAY BE  
ENOUGH TO WARRANT A FIRE WEATHER WATCH. ERCS WILL STILL BE NEAR  
THE 90TH PERCENTILE. TRENDS WILL BE MONITORED AND THE FIRE RISK  
ASSESSED AGAIN WITH NEWER DATA TODAY.  
 
THURSDAY WILL ALSO BE WINDY BUT MUCH DRIER OVER EASTERN NM IN THE  
WAKE OF THE DEPARTING PACIFIC STORM SYSTEM. CONFIDENCE IS HIGHER FOR  
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER EAST OF THE CENTRAL MT CHAIN. AN EVEN STRONGER  
PACIFIC COLD FRONT WILL SURGE ACROSS NM FRIDAY WITH VERY DRY AND  
WINDY CONDITIONS YET AGAIN. CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER IS LIKELY FOR AT  
LEAST EASTERN NM DESPITE COOLER TEMPS.  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
FARMINGTON...................... 72 47 62 37 / 20 70 90 10  
DULCE........................... 69 34 54 31 / 20 90 90 20  
CUBA............................ 69 41 57 33 / 20 50 80 20  
GALLUP.......................... 69 40 60 31 / 30 60 80 5  
EL MORRO........................ 67 43 56 35 / 30 50 70 5  
GRANTS.......................... 72 42 61 32 / 20 40 60 5  
QUEMADO......................... 70 43 60 34 / 30 30 60 0  
MAGDALENA....................... 73 49 64 39 / 10 20 40 5  
DATIL........................... 68 45 60 36 / 20 20 40 5  
RESERVE......................... 75 41 65 29 / 20 20 50 5  
GLENWOOD........................ 80 43 68 33 / 20 20 40 0  
CHAMA........................... 62 35 47 29 / 20 90 90 30  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 69 46 56 41 / 10 50 80 20  
PECOS........................... 70 42 57 35 / 5 40 80 20  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 66 41 52 36 / 10 60 70 20  
RED RIVER....................... 61 36 48 29 / 20 70 80 30  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 63 33 50 28 / 10 60 80 20  
TAOS............................ 71 38 57 31 / 10 60 70 20  
MORA............................ 68 40 57 35 / 10 30 60 20  
ESPANOLA........................ 76 47 63 38 / 5 50 70 20  
SANTA FE........................ 71 46 57 40 / 5 50 80 20  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 74 45 61 37 / 5 40 80 20  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 76 53 65 45 / 10 30 60 10  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 78 52 68 43 / 10 30 60 10  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 80 51 70 41 / 10 30 50 10  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 78 53 68 43 / 10 30 60 10  
BELEN........................... 80 50 71 39 / 10 20 50 10  
BERNALILLO...................... 79 53 68 43 / 10 40 60 10  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 80 49 70 37 / 10 30 50 10  
CORRALES........................ 79 53 69 42 / 10 30 60 10  
LOS LUNAS....................... 80 50 70 38 / 10 20 50 10  
PLACITAS........................ 75 53 63 44 / 10 40 70 20  
RIO RANCHO...................... 79 53 67 44 / 10 30 60 10  
SOCORRO......................... 83 55 74 43 / 10 10 30 10  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 72 48 60 43 / 10 30 70 20  
TIJERAS......................... 75 49 63 39 / 10 30 70 20  
EDGEWOOD........................ 76 47 63 40 / 5 30 70 20  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 77 44 65 34 / 5 20 60 20  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 71 44 60 36 / 5 20 60 10  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 75 46 64 39 / 10 20 60 10  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 74 46 64 39 / 10 10 50 20  
CARRIZOZO....................... 77 50 68 43 / 5 5 40 20  
RUIDOSO......................... 71 47 63 41 / 0 5 40 20  
CAPULIN......................... 70 42 63 33 / 10 20 20 10  
RATON........................... 76 41 68 33 / 5 20 30 10  
SPRINGER........................ 76 42 68 34 / 5 10 30 10  
LAS VEGAS....................... 74 44 62 36 / 5 10 50 10  
CLAYTON......................... 78 43 73 42 / 10 5 20 10  
ROY............................. 77 47 67 38 / 5 10 20 10  
CONCHAS......................... 85 52 75 41 / 0 5 20 10  
SANTA ROSA...................... 80 51 72 44 / 0 5 20 10  
TUCUMCARI....................... 87 50 77 44 / 0 0 20 10  
CLOVIS.......................... 87 52 79 45 / 0 0 20 10  
PORTALES........................ 88 50 81 44 / 0 0 20 10  
FORT SUMNER..................... 85 50 77 43 / 0 0 20 10  
ROSWELL......................... 90 54 82 47 / 0 0 10 5  
PICACHO......................... 82 51 75 43 / 0 0 20 5  
ELK............................. 81 47 72 39 / 0 0 20 5  
 

 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
NONE.  

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...42  
LONG TERM....42  
AVIATION...42  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NM Page Main Text Page