353  
FXUS65 KABQ 281118 AAA  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
518 AM MDT TUE APR 28 2026  
   
..NEW AVIATION
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
UPDATED AT 515 AM MDT TUE APR 28 2026  
 
- A HIGH RISK OF RAPID FIRE SPREAD DUE TO DRY AND GUSTY  
CONDITIONS WILL CONTINUE TODAY AND TUESDAY EAST OF THE CENTRAL  
MOUNTAIN CHAIN.  
 
- WIDESPREAD RAIN RETURNS THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY WITH SEVERAL  
INCHES OF HIGH MOUNTAIN SNOW ACCUMULATING IN NORTHERN NEW  
MEXICO. WINTER TRAVEL CONDITIONS ARE LIKELY IN THE NORTHERN  
MOUNTAINS, ESPECIALLY THURSDAY NIGHT AND FRIDAY.  
 
- GUSTY EAST CROSSWINDS WILL DEVELOP BELOW CANYONS OPENING INTO  
THE RIO GRANDE AND UPPER TULAROSA VALLEYS THURSDAY NIGHT AND  
FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
 
(TODAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY)  
ISSUED AT 115 AM MDT TUE APR 28 2026  
 
A WEAK AND DRY SHORTWAVE TROUGH WILL TREK OVER NORTHERN NM AND  
SOUTHERN CO THIS MORNING, DRAGGING STRONGER WINDS ALOFT ACROSS THE  
FORECAST AREA. THE SHORTWAVE WILL THEN TRANSLATE INTO THE SOUTHERN  
PLAINS THROUGH THE AFTERNOON WITH A SLOW REDUCTION IN SPEEDS ALOFT.  
THIS WILL TRANSLATE TO BREEZY TO WINDY CONDITIONS AT THE SURFACE  
TODAY WITH THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS TO EAST CENTRAL PLAINS OBSERVING  
THE STRONGEST GUSTS OF 30 TO 40 MPH. AT THE SURFACE, A BACKDOOR COLD  
FRONT HAS ENTERED UNION AND EASTERN COLFAX COUNTIES IN NORTHEASTERN  
NM, AND THIS BOUNDARY WILL STRUGGLE TO MAKE MUCH HEADWAY, EVENTUALLY  
RETREATING NORTHEASTWARD AS A WEAK SURFACE LOW MOVES IN BY LATE  
AFTERNOON. HIGHER SURFACE DEWPOINTS ARE CURRENTLY MOVING IN BEHIND  
THIS BACKDOOR FRONT, BUT THEY ARE LARGELY PROJECTED TO BECOME  
SCOURED OUT BY LATE AFTERNOON ONCE THE SURFACE LOW MOVES BACK OVER  
UNION COUNTY. ELSEWHERE, VERY LOW SINGLE DIGIT TO SUB-ZERO DEWPOINT  
READINGS (IN F) WILL BE COMMON, AND THE COMBINATION OF LOW RELATIVE  
HUMIDITY AND GUSTY CONDITIONS WILL KEEP FIRE DANGER HIGH THIS  
AFTERNOON. CIRRUS CLOUDS ARE CURRENTLY THINNING OUT, BUT WILL RE-  
ENTER NM LATE THIS AFTERNOON INTO THE OVERNIGHT. TODAY'S HIGH  
TEMPERATURES WILL RUN CLOSE TO NORMAL, WITHIN A FEW DEGREES EITHER  
SIDE.  
 
THE AFOREMENTIONED BACKDOOR COLD FRONT WILL GAIN ANOTHER PUSH  
TONIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY MORNING WITH NORTHEASTERLY GUSTS SPREADING  
OVER THE PLAINS. THE FRONT WILL ALSO ENCROACH UPON THE CENTRAL  
MOUNTAIN CHAIN AND THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY NEAR OR JUST AFTER MIDNIGHT  
(AFTER MIDNIGHT NEAR ABQ). A FEW LOW STRATUS CLOUDS OVER EASTERN  
ZONES ARE MODELED BY THE NAM, HREF, AND INHERENT CAMS WITH THE EAST  
SLOPES OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN BEST POISED TO SEE DEVELOPMENT  
WEDNESDAY MORNING. ANY LOW CLOUDS WOULD ERODE AWAY THROUGH LATE  
WEDNESDAY MORNING WITH SURFACE WINDS VEERING SOUTHERLY IN THE PLAINS  
BY THE AFTERNOON. THE POLAR AND SUBTROPICAL JETS WILL HAVE UNDERGONE  
A MERGING OVER AZ AND NM BY THIS TIME WEDNESDAY, BUT WIND SPEEDS AT  
700 MB ARE GENERALLY STAYING WITHIN A 15-30 KT RANGE, WHICH WOULD BE  
A REASONABLE GUST APPROXIMATION BY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, ESPECIALLY  
IN WESTERN ZONES WHERE THE WESTERLY DIRECTION WOULD BE MORE  
CONSISTENT THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE DEEPLY MIXED BOUNDARY LAYER.  
NORTHEAST HIGHLAND AREAS WOULD STAY CLOSER TO A 25 TO 30 KT GUST  
RANGE DUE TO THE TIGHTER SURFACE GRADIENT THERE. TEMPERATURES WOULD  
RUN A COUPLE TO A FEW DEGREES COOLER IN THE EASTERN PLAINS DUE TO  
THE PREVIOUS FRONTAL INTRUSION, BUT WESTERN ZONES WILL ACTUALLY GAIN  
A COUPLE DEGREES WEDNESDAY. NOTABLE DEWPOINT RISES WOULD ALSO BE  
OBSERVED IN THE EASTERN PLAINS.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM
 
 
(WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY)  
ISSUED AT 115 AM MDT TUE APR 28 2026  
 
A SECOND PUSH OF THE FRONT WILL COME IN LATE WEDNESDAY INTO  
THURSDAY MORNING, USHERING IN HIGHER SURFACE DEWPOINTS AND  
UPSLOPE EASTERLY FLOW FOR MANY EASTERN TO CENTRAL ZONES.  
MEANWHILE, UPSTREAM IN THE UPPER LEVELS A SUBTROPICAL LOW WILL BE  
CROSSING THE BAJA PENINSULA JUST AS THE POLAR JET SENDS ANOTHER  
TROUGH TOWARD THE FOUR CORNERS. THE SUBTROPICAL PERTURBATION LOOKS  
TO IMPACT MOSTLY SOUTHERN NM WITH INCREASED PWATS AND  
PRECIPITATION THROUGH LATE THURSDAY INTO FRIDAY MORNING WHILE THE  
NORTHERN STREAM SHORTWAVE ABSORBS ADDITIONAL PRESSURE FALLS THAT  
WOULD IMPACT MORE NORTHERN SECTIONS OF THE STATE FRIDAY INTO  
SATURDAY. THE COOL, MOIST, AND STABLE AIRMASS OVER THE EAST WILL  
PERSIST THROUGH THIS TIME, LENDING TOWARD MORE WIDESPREAD  
STRATIFORM RAINFALL THERE AND SEVERAL INCHES OF WET, LATE SEASON  
SNOW ON THE NORTHERN PEAKS. NBM VERSIONS 4.3 AND 5.0 PAINT 10-15  
INCHES OVER MANY SANGRE DE CRISTO PEAKS BY SUNDAY MORNING, AND  
WITH PERSISTENT EASTERLY UPSLOPE FLOW, THIS SEEMS REASONABLE. AS  
FOR LOWER ELEVATION RAINFALL, THE FAR EASTERN PLAINS LOOK TO  
RECEIVE THE MOST QPF UPWARDS OF 1.0 TO 1.5 INCHES WITH THE LATEST  
NBM 5.0 SHOWING CONSIDERABLY HIGHER AMOUNTS. THE STRATIFORM NATURE  
OF THE RAIN IN THESE EASTERN ZONES WOULD SEEM TO SUGGEST LOWER  
AMOUNTS, BUT THIS WILL BE ONE OF THE MORE LONGER DURATION RAIN  
EVENTS SEEN IN A LONG TIME, 30-48 HOURS FOR SOME EASTERN LOCALES.  
PRESSURE RISES AND SUBSIDENCE WOULD START BUILDING IN LATE  
SATURDAY INTO SATURDAY NIGHT, CAUSING PRECIPITATION TO DWINDLE.  
 
A RIDGE OF HIGH PRESSURE WOULD THEN BUILD OVER THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES  
SUNDAY THROUGH TUESDAY OF NEXT WEEK, KEEPING MINIMAL CHANCES FOR  
PRECIPITATION WHILE TEMPERATURES WORK THEIR WAY BACK TOWARD  
NORMALCY. MUCH HIGHER SURFACE DEWPOINTS (IN THE 20'S AND 30'S DEG F)  
WOULD COMPLEMENT THIS REGIME WITH A LIGHTER WIND FIELD THAT WOULD  
BRING A WELCOME RESPITE FROM HIGH FIRE DANGER.  
 
THERE IS LARGE UNCERTAINTY AT THIS POINT, BUT A STRONG CLOSED LOW IS  
SLATED TO ENTER NM BY WEDNESDAY, BRINGING COOLER TEMPERATURES AND AT  
LEAST SPOTTY TO SCATTERED SHOWERS FOR NORTHERN PORTIONS OF THE  
FORECAST AREA.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
(12Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 515 AM MDT TUE APR 28 2026  
 
A WEAK UPPER LEVEL DISTURBANCE WILL CROSS THE NORTHERN PART OF  
THE STATE, LEADING TO AN INCREASE IN WINDS ALOFT (SPEEDS RISING TO  
30 TO 40 KT AT 10,000 FT MSL), AND THIS WILL KEEP GUSTY  
CONDITIONS AT THE SURFACE ALONG AND JUST DOWNWIND (EAST) OF THE  
CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN THROUGH THE MORNING. WINDS ALOFT WILL  
DECREASE IN SPEED THROUGH THE AFTERNOON, BUT BREEZY TO WINDY  
CONDITIONS WILL STILL PERSIST AT THE SURFACE WITH THE STRONGEST  
GUSTS OF 30 TO 40 KT FOCUSING NEAR KCQC, KSXU, KTCC, AND KCVN  
THIS AFTERNOON. WINDS WILL START TO DECREASE IN SPEED THIS  
EVENING, BUT A COLD FRONT WILL ARRIVE FROM THE NORTHEAST, STIRRING  
UP GUSTS IN THE EASTERN HALF OF NEW MEXICO OVERNIGHT INTO  
WEDNESDAY MORNING. THIS FRONT WILL ALSO SPREAD MVFR CEILINGS  
(BELOW 3,000 FT) OVER EAST SLOPES OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 115 AM MDT TUE APR 28 2026  
 
BREEZY TO WINDY CONDITIONS WILL REDEVELOP AGAIN TODAY WITH A FAST-  
MOVING SHORTWAVE TROUGH CROSSING NORTHERN NM EARLY TODAY. A BACKDOOR  
COLD FRONT WILL DISRUPT THINGS IN NORTHEASTERN NM, BUT SHOULD  
RETREAT LATE THIS AFTERNOON BEFORE REGAINING MOMENTUM THIS EVENING.  
THIS WILL PLACE THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS AND EAST CENTRAL PLAINS OF NM  
AT HIGHEST RISK FOR CRITICAL WIND SPEEDS WHILE ALL AREAS SUFFER FROM  
EVEN DRIER CONDITIONS THAN YESTERDAY WITH WIDESPREAD SUB-10% RH. THE  
RED FLAG WARNING WILL CONTINUE FOR ALL OF NORTHEASTERN AND EAST  
CENTRAL NM, BUT THERE ARE GROWING DOUBTS THAT NORTHEASTERN ZONES  
WILL MEET THE WIND CRITERIA DUE TO THE AFOREMENTIONED FRONT WHICH  
HAS ALREADY NOSED ITS WAY INTO UNION AND EASTERN COLFAX COUNTIES.  
 
THE FRONT WILL GAIN MOMENTUM AND MOVE OVER EASTERN ZONES TONIGHT,  
STIRRING UP SOME NOCTURNAL GUSTS, BUT ALSO BRINGING IN CONSIDERABLE  
RISES TO DEWPOINTS AND HUMIDITY. THIS WILL SUPPRESS THE CRITICAL  
FIRE THREAT FOR MOST OF THE PLAINS GOING INTO WEDNESDAY, BUT THE  
CENTRAL TO NORTHEAST HIGHLANDS MAY FLIRT WITH MARGINALLY CRITICAL  
CONDITIONS WHERE THE LEE-SIDE SURFACE TROUGH WILL REDEVELOP AND  
HUMIDITY WILL BE LOWER ALONG WITH HIGHER GUSTS OF 25 TO 30 MPH.  
 
A LONG OVERDUE BREAK FROM CRITICAL CONDITIONS LOOKS TO ARRIVE  
THURSDAY INTO FRIDAY AND SATURDAY AS A PAIR OF DISTURBANCES ALOFT  
COMBINE WITH MOIST EASTERLY UPSLOPE FLOW, PRODUCING MUCH GREATER  
POTENTIAL FOR SOAKING RAINFALL AND NORTHERN MOUNTAIN SNOW. THIS  
EVENT WOULD FAVOR THE EASTERN PLAINS AND NORTHERN MOUNTAINS FOR  
RAIN/SNOW, BUT EVEN WESTERN ZONES LOOK TO RECEIVE A TENTH OF AN INCH  
OR TWO. EVEN AFTER THIS PRECIPITATION EVENT SUBSIDES, LIGHTER WINDS  
AND CONSIDERABLY HIGHER DEWPOINTS WILL LINGER INTO SUNDAY, MONDAY,  
AND TUESDAY OF NEXT WEEK WHICH WILL HELP FEND OFF WIDESPREAD FIRE  
WEATHER CONCERNS.  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
FARMINGTON...................... 67 39 72 43 / 0 0 0 5  
DULCE........................... 62 26 68 31 / 0 0 0 10  
CUBA............................ 64 34 69 39 / 0 0 0 20  
GALLUP.......................... 66 28 69 36 / 0 0 0 10  
EL MORRO........................ 64 34 66 39 / 0 0 0 20  
GRANTS.......................... 70 30 71 36 / 0 0 0 20  
QUEMADO......................... 70 35 70 41 / 0 0 0 20  
MAGDALENA....................... 74 44 73 48 / 0 0 0 30  
DATIL........................... 70 38 69 43 / 0 0 0 30  
RESERVE......................... 75 35 75 39 / 0 0 5 30  
GLENWOOD........................ 79 40 79 44 / 0 0 5 30  
CHAMA........................... 57 28 62 31 / 0 0 0 10  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 65 43 68 47 / 0 0 0 20  
PECOS........................... 65 35 69 40 / 0 0 5 30  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 62 36 65 39 / 0 0 10 30  
RED RIVER....................... 52 30 56 32 / 0 0 20 40  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 58 23 61 26 / 0 0 10 40  
TAOS............................ 65 30 69 34 / 0 0 5 30  
MORA............................ 66 32 68 36 / 0 0 5 30  
ESPANOLA........................ 73 38 75 44 / 0 0 0 20  
SANTA FE........................ 66 42 69 46 / 0 0 0 20  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 69 38 72 44 / 0 0 0 20  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 74 48 76 52 / 0 0 0 20  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 76 45 78 49 / 0 0 0 20  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 79 43 81 49 / 0 0 0 20  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 77 46 79 52 / 0 0 0 20  
BELEN........................... 80 41 80 47 / 0 0 0 20  
BERNALILLO...................... 77 43 79 50 / 0 0 0 20  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 79 39 80 45 / 0 0 0 20  
CORRALES........................ 78 44 79 51 / 0 0 0 20  
LOS LUNAS....................... 79 40 80 47 / 0 0 0 20  
PLACITAS........................ 71 46 74 51 / 0 0 0 20  
RIO RANCHO...................... 77 45 79 52 / 0 0 0 20  
SOCORRO......................... 83 47 83 52 / 0 0 0 30  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 68 42 71 47 / 0 0 0 20  
TIJERAS......................... 70 43 71 47 / 0 0 0 20  
EDGEWOOD........................ 70 37 73 43 / 0 0 0 20  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 72 31 74 38 / 0 0 0 20  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 67 35 69 42 / 0 0 0 20  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 72 39 74 43 / 0 0 0 30  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 71 41 72 45 / 0 0 0 30  
CARRIZOZO....................... 76 50 76 51 / 0 0 0 30  
RUIDOSO......................... 69 48 69 48 / 0 0 5 30  
CAPULIN......................... 67 29 62 34 / 0 5 30 60  
RATON........................... 70 30 67 36 / 0 0 20 50  
SPRINGER........................ 72 33 70 38 / 0 0 10 40  
LAS VEGAS....................... 68 33 68 39 / 0 0 5 30  
CLAYTON......................... 75 35 67 40 / 0 5 10 50  
ROY............................. 73 35 67 41 / 0 0 10 40  
CONCHAS......................... 81 41 77 46 / 0 0 5 30  
SANTA ROSA...................... 75 40 73 46 / 0 0 0 20  
TUCUMCARI....................... 83 43 76 47 / 0 0 0 30  
CLOVIS.......................... 83 45 76 49 / 0 0 0 30  
PORTALES........................ 85 46 78 49 / 0 0 0 30  
FORT SUMNER..................... 83 44 77 49 / 0 0 0 20  
ROSWELL......................... 88 52 82 56 / 0 0 0 30  
PICACHO......................... 82 50 79 51 / 0 0 0 30  
ELK............................. 81 48 79 49 / 0 0 0 30  
 

 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
RED FLAG WARNING FROM 11 AM THIS MORNING TO 8 PM MDT THIS  
EVENING FOR NMZ104-123-125-126.  
 

 
 

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

The Nexlab NM Page Main Text Page