293  
FXUS65 KABQ 212323 AAA  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
423 PM MST FRI NOV 21 2025  
   
..NEW AVIATION
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
UPDATED AT 423 PM MST FRI NOV 21 2025  
 
- LOW CHANCE OF FOG AND FREEZING FOG ACROSS CENTRAL, NORTHERN, AND  
EASTERN NM SATURDAY MORNING.  
 
- ANOTHER STORM SYSTEM WILL BRING A ROUND OF WIDESPREAD LOWER  
ELEVATION RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY  
INTO EARLY MONDAY MORNING. A FEW INCHES OF ACCUMULATING SNOW  
WILL AGAIN BE FAVORED ABOVE 8,500 FEET.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
 
(THIS EVENING THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 1235 PM MST FRI NOV 21 2025  
 
WHAT'S LEFT OF YESTERDAY'S STORM SYSTEM IS NOW OVER KS/MO WITH  
WRAPAROUND NORTHERLY FLOW PUSHING INTO NORTHEASTERN NM WHERE SOME  
LOW CLOUDS ARE LINGERING B/W RATON AND CLAYTON. MORE WIDESPREAD LOW  
CLOUDS PERSIST OVER THE SLOPES OF THE NORTHERN MOUNTAINS WHICH WILL  
BE SLOW TO ERODE THIS AFTERNOON. VISIBLE SATELLITE IMAGERY ALSO  
SHOWS FRESH SNOW ATOP THE WESTERN AND NORTHERN MOUNTAIN PEAKS FROM  
YESTERDAY'S STORM SYSTEM, A PLEASANT SIGHT TO SEE. MEANWHILE GOES WV  
SATELLITE IMAGERY SHOWS THE NEXT AND LAST IN THE LINE OF STORM  
SYSTEMS SPINNING DOWN THE CA COASTLINE, WELL DEFINED WITH TWO  
DISTINCT VORT-LOVES ON THE WESTERN AND EASTERN PERIPHERIES OF THE  
554DM H5 LOW CENTER. A STEADY INCREASE IN HIGH CIRRUS WILL ENCROACH  
ACROSS WESTERN AND CENTRAL NM THIS AFTERNOON ASSOCIATED WITH THE  
EAST SIDE VORT-LOBE, SPREADING OVER EASTERN NM TONIGHT. MEANWHILE, A  
WEAK SURFACE FRONT PUSHING SOUTHWARD THRU EASTERN NM WILL HELP BRING  
LOW CLOUDS AND SOME PATCHY FOG THERE LATE TONIGHT INTO EARLY  
SATURDAY MORNING. A FEW NORTHERN VALLEY LOCATIONS MAY ALSO SEE SOME  
FOG OR FREEZING FOG SATURDAY MORNING AS WELL.  
 
SATURDAY SEES THE LOW BECOME MORE SYMMETRICAL WITH THE DRIER  
WESTERLY LOBE WRAPPING TO THE SOUTHERN PERIPHERY OF THE H5 LOW AS  
IT MOVES OVER THE NORTHERN BAJA PENINSULA. HIGH TEMPERATURES  
REBOUND FURTHER OVER NM SATURDAY AS WAA FILLS IN ACROSS MUCH OF  
THE STATE. SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE WILL ALSO SLIDE EAST OVER OK/TX  
BRINGING SOUTHERLY RETURN FLOW INTO SOUTHEASTERN NM. THE INCREASE  
IN SURFACE MOISTURE HIGHLIGHTED BY TD'S RISING INTO THE 40S ACROSS  
SOUTHEASTERN NM UNDERLYING FAVORABLE DIVERGENT FLOW ALOFT WILL  
YIELD THE ONSET AND SUBSEQUENT EXPANSION OF SHOWERS WITH EMBEDDED  
THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTHEASTERN NM SUNDAY  
MORNING. SURFACE SOUTHEASTERLY UPSLOPE FLOW FURTHER NORTH ALONG  
THE SANDIA/MANZANO'S AND SANGRE DE CRISTO MTS WILL YIELD NUMEROUS  
SHOWERS WITH SNOW LEVELS STILL FAVORING 8,000 TO 9,000 FEET. AN  
EAST CANYON WIND INTO EASTERN ABQ THRU THE TIJERAS CANYON WILL  
ALSO LIKELY RESULT SATURDAY NIGHT INTO SUNDAY MORNING. WHILE MORE  
CONVECTIVE SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY OVER EASTERN NM MOVES  
INTO TX SUNDAY AFTERNOON, A CONTINUATION OF VALLEY RAIN AND  
MOUNTAIN SHOWERS WILL PERSIST OVER THE WESTERN AND NORTHERN  
MOUNTAINS AS THE CORE OF THE H5 LOW MOVES OVER THE FOUR CORNERS  
REGION. NUMERICAL MODEL GUIDANCE CONTINUES TO ADVERTISE RELATIVELY  
WARM H7 TEMPERATURES OF ROUGHLY -2C TO -4C WHICH WILL LIMIT SNOW  
TO LIQUID RATIOS. AS SUCH, FORECAST SNOW TOTALS LOOK TO BE  
REMARKABLE SIMILAR TO THE MOST RECENT WINTER SYSTEM OVER THE  
NORTHERN MOUNTAINS OF 2 TO 8 INCHES. LIQUID EQUIVALENTS WILL RANGE  
FROM THE 0.25" TO 1.00" OVER THE WESTERN AND NORTHERN MOUNTAINS  
AS WELL.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM
 
 
(SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY)  
ISSUED AT 1235 PM MST FRI NOV 21 2025  
 
SNOW WILL PERSIST THE LONGEST OVER THE WESTERN SLOPES OF THE  
NORTHERN MOUNTAINS SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MONDAY MORNING WITH NORTHWEST  
FLOW ALOFT CONTINUING OROGRAPHICALLY DRIVING SNOW THERE ON THE BACK  
SIDE OF THE H5 LOW. TEMPERATURES REBOUND MONDAY WITH BREEZY  
NORTHWESTERLY FLOW FILLING IN BEHIND THE EXITING H5 LOW. FORECAST  
CONFIDENCE IS LOW REGARDING WIND SPEEDS MONDAY AFTERNOON AS  
NUMERICAL MODEL CONFIDENCE DIFFERS ON THE EVOLUTION OF AN UPPER  
LEVEL SYSTEM OVER MT/WY. THIS WILL IMPACT THE N-S PRESSURE GRADIENT  
ACROSS THE STATE AND HOW STRONG THE WESTERLY TO NORTHWESTERLY WINDS  
WILL BE.  
 
TUESDAY SEES A COLD FRONT BACK SOUTHWARD THRU EASTERN NM FROM THE  
AFOREMENTIONED UPPER LEVEL SYSTEM CROSSING THE NORTHERN GREAT  
PLAINS. TEMPERATURES FALL BACK 5F TO 15F ACROSS EASTERN NM BEHIND  
THE COLD FRONT. DRY WEATHER PERSISTS WEDNESDAY AND THRU THE END OF  
THE THANKSGIVING DAY HOLIDAY AND FRIDAY. LONG RANGE ENSEMBLE  
GUIDANCE SHOWS A RETURN TO ANOTHER ACTIVE WEATHER PATTERN SUNDAY  
INTO MONDAY AFTER THANKSGIVING WITH A MORE AMPLIFIED POLAR JET OVER  
THE NORTHERN PACIFIC. THIS WILL SET THE STAGE FOR THE NEXT STORM  
SYSTEM TO ENTER THE WESTERN CONUS.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
(00Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 423 PM MST FRI NOV 21 2025  
 
VFR LOW CLOUDS ACROSS NORTHWEST AND NORTH CENTRAL NM, INCLUDING  
KFMN AND KSAF WILL CONTINUE TO BREAK UP EARLY THIS EVENING. BKN  
MID-LEVEL CLOUDS MOVING ACROSS THE AIRSPACE FROM SOUTH TO  
NORTHWEST OVERNIGHT. A WEAK BOUNDARY ACROSS NORTHEAST NM WILL PUSH  
SOUTHEAST ACROSS THE REST OF EASTERN NM OVERNIGHT WITH LOW CLOUDS  
DEVELOPING ACROSS NORTHEAST AND EAST CENTRAL NM IN IT'S WAKE EARLY  
SATURDAY MORNING. THIS WILL RESULT IN SOME IFR TO POTENTIALLY AS  
LOW AS AIRPORT MINIMUM CONDITIONS FOR SITES ACROSS THIS AREA,  
INCLUDING KLVS AND KTCC. SOME PATCHY FOG CANNOT BE RULED OUT AS  
WELL. LOW CLOUDS LOOK TO REMAIN IN THE VICINITY BUT NOT DIRECTLY  
IMPACT KROW AT THIS TIME. LOW CLOUDS ACROSS NORTHEAST AND EAST  
CENTRAL NM LOOK TO BREAK UP DURING THE LATE MORNING HOURS WITH  
TWO AREAS OF SCT TO BKN MID TO HIGH LEVEL CLOUDS MOVING INTO WESTERN  
AND CENTRAL NM AND FAR SOUTHEAST NM DURING THE AFTERNOON.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 1235 PM MST FRI NOV 21 2025  
 
NO FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS TODAY AND SATURDAY AS TEMPERATURES REBOUND.  
WIDESPREAD VALLEY RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW SPREAD OVER THE STATE  
SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT. DRY CONDITIONS RETURN MONDAY  
WITH STRENGTHENING NORTHWESTERLY WINDS MONDAY AFTERNOON, WHERE GUSTY  
WINDS OF 35 TO 45 MPH COULD REACH THE HIGHLANDS ALONG THE CENTRAL  
MOUNTAIN CHAIN. TEMPERATURES AND HUMIDITY WILL REMAIN WELL  
OUTSIDE CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER THRESHOLDS HOWEVER. OTHERWISE, DRY  
CONDITIONS PERSIST THROUGH THE THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY WEEK.  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
FARMINGTON...................... 33 59 38 49 / 0 0 50 70  
DULCE........................... 21 58 27 47 / 0 0 40 90  
CUBA............................ 27 56 33 46 / 0 0 60 80  
GALLUP.......................... 25 58 30 45 / 0 0 70 60  
EL MORRO........................ 28 55 32 44 / 0 0 80 70  
GRANTS.......................... 26 56 32 49 / 0 0 80 70  
QUEMADO......................... 28 58 33 46 / 0 0 80 50  
MAGDALENA....................... 32 56 37 50 / 0 0 80 50  
DATIL........................... 28 55 33 46 / 0 0 80 40  
RESERVE......................... 24 63 30 50 / 0 5 90 50  
GLENWOOD........................ 27 67 34 55 / 0 5 90 50  
CHAMA........................... 20 52 27 43 / 0 0 40 90  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 33 53 35 44 / 0 0 70 90  
PECOS........................... 28 57 33 46 / 0 0 70 90  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 26 52 30 43 / 0 0 30 90  
RED RIVER....................... 20 44 25 36 / 0 0 30 90  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 13 52 20 43 / 0 0 40 90  
TAOS............................ 22 56 29 47 / 0 0 40 90  
MORA............................ 25 57 30 47 / 0 0 50 90  
ESPANOLA........................ 25 60 32 52 / 0 0 60 90  
SANTA FE........................ 31 57 37 47 / 0 0 70 90  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 29 58 36 50 / 0 0 70 80  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 36 62 43 53 / 0 0 70 70  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 34 63 42 55 / 0 0 70 70  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 33 64 41 57 / 0 0 70 60  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 35 62 42 55 / 0 0 70 60  
BELEN........................... 28 62 38 57 / 0 0 70 60  
BERNALILLO...................... 34 64 41 56 / 0 0 70 70  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 28 63 37 57 / 0 0 70 60  
CORRALES........................ 33 64 41 57 / 0 0 70 70  
LOS LUNAS....................... 30 63 38 57 / 0 0 70 60  
PLACITAS........................ 35 60 40 51 / 0 0 70 80  
RIO RANCHO...................... 35 63 41 55 / 0 0 70 70  
SOCORRO......................... 33 64 40 60 / 0 0 70 40  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 31 57 36 47 / 0 0 70 80  
TIJERAS......................... 32 58 38 49 / 0 0 70 80  
EDGEWOOD........................ 28 58 35 50 / 0 0 70 80  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 22 60 33 52 / 0 0 60 80  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 28 55 33 47 / 0 0 60 80  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 28 59 35 50 / 0 0 70 70  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 28 60 36 50 / 0 0 70 70  
CARRIZOZO....................... 33 63 40 54 / 0 0 60 60  
RUIDOSO......................... 32 57 37 49 / 0 0 60 60  
CAPULIN......................... 27 57 29 45 / 0 0 10 90  
RATON........................... 26 59 28 47 / 0 0 20 80  
SPRINGER........................ 26 60 29 51 / 0 0 20 80  
LAS VEGAS....................... 28 57 32 46 / 0 0 50 90  
CLAYTON......................... 33 62 35 50 / 0 0 10 90  
ROY............................. 29 58 33 50 / 0 0 30 90  
CONCHAS......................... 31 63 35 57 / 0 0 40 90  
SANTA ROSA...................... 31 58 36 56 / 0 0 40 80  
TUCUMCARI....................... 31 64 36 58 / 0 0 30 90  
CLOVIS.......................... 34 64 40 59 / 0 0 40 90  
PORTALES........................ 33 65 40 62 / 0 0 40 90  
FORT SUMNER..................... 31 61 38 60 / 0 0 50 80  
ROSWELL......................... 34 63 44 64 / 0 0 50 50  
PICACHO......................... 33 62 39 62 / 0 0 50 50  
ELK............................. 29 61 35 59 / 0 0 50 40  
 

 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
NONE.  

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...24  
LONG TERM....24  
AVIATION...71  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NM Page Main Text Page