934  
FXUS65 KABQ 160531 AAB  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
1131 PM MDT TUE JUL 15 2025  
   
..NEW AVIATION
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
UPDATED AT 1126 PM MDT TUE JUL 15 2025  
 
- SCATTERED-TO-ISOLATED SHOWERS AND STORMS WILL FAVOR CENTRAL AND  
WESTERN NEW MEXICO AGAIN WEDNESDAY, WHEN THERE WILL BE A  
MODERATE RISK OF BURN SCAR FLASH FLOODING IN THE SANGRE DE  
CRISTO MOUNTAINS AND A SLIGHT RISK OVER THE SOUTH CENTRAL  
MOUNTAINS.  
 
- SCATTERED-TO-NUMEROUS SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE FORECAST  
THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY WITH A RISK OF LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL  
AND AT LEAST ISOLATED FLASH FLOODING EACH DAY. SOME STORMS WILL  
PRODUCE TORRENTIAL DOWNPOURS ON THURSDAY, WHEN THE RISK OF FLASH  
FLOODING WILL BE GREATEST.  
 
- GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS, SMALL HAIL, AND DANGEROUS LIGHTNING COULD  
ACCOMPANY STORMS EACH DAY AROUND THE AREA. A FEW STORMS MAY  
BECOME SEVERE ON THURSDAY.  
 
- AFTER HIGH TEMPERATURES MOSTLY BELOW AVERAGE DURING THE LATTER  
HALF OF THIS WEEK, READINGS WILL CLIMB ABOVE AVERAGE EARLY IN  
THE COMING WORK WEEK, AND PRECIPITATION CHANCES WILL DECREASE,  
AS A HIGH PRESSURE SYSTEM BUILDS OVER NEW MEXICO.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
 
(THIS EVENING THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 1220 PM MDT TUE JUL 15 2025  
 
SHOWERS AND STORMS WILL CONTINUE TO FAVOR THE EAST SLOPES OF THE  
CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN WESTWARD THIS EVENING, WITH ONLY A FEW  
CELLS OVER THE SOUTHWEST MOUNTAINS POSSIBLE AFTER MIDNIGHT.  
PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES WILL INCREASE TO BETWEEN 100-150% OF  
AVERAGE ON WEDNESDAY AS AN UPPER LEVEL TROUGH PASSING EASTWARD  
OVER THE NORTHERN AND CENTRAL ROCKIES DRAWS BETTER MOISTURE  
NORTHWARD OVER NM. STORM COVERAGE AND RAINFALL INTENSITY WILL ALSO  
INCREASE ON WEDNESDAY WITH A GREATER RISK THAT SOME STORMS WILL  
PRODUCE LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL. SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS OVER THE NORTHERN AND WESTERN MOUNTAINS WILL  
RESULT IN A MODERATE RISK OF FLASH FLOODING BELOW THE HERMIT'S  
PEAK CALF CANYON SCAR, WHILE ISOLATED TO SCATTERED ACTIVITY FROM  
THE NORTHWEST PLATEAU SOUTHEASTWARD ACROSS CENTRAL AND SOUTH  
CENTRAL AREAS RESULTS IN A SLIGHT RISK OF BURN SCAR FLASH FLOODING  
FOR THE RUIDOSO AREA SCARS. NORTHEAST PARTS OF THE FORECAST AREA  
SHOULD ALSO SEE SCATTERED TO ISOLATED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ON  
WEDNESDAY. WEDNESDAY NIGHT A MOIST BACKDOOR COLD FRONT WILL  
WILL INCREASE MOISTURE ACROSS THE NORTHEAST AND EAST CENTRAL  
PLAINS WHERE THERE IS A ROUGHLY 40-60% CHANCE OF LOW CLOUDS  
DEVELOPING.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM
 
 
(THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY)  
ISSUED AT 1220 PM MDT TUE JUL 15 2025  
 
THE UPTICK IN THUNDERSTORM COVERAGE AND RAINFALL INTENSITY WILL  
CONTINUE INTO THURSDAY THANKS TO LOW LEVEL MOISTURE DELIVERED  
POTENTIALLY AS FAR WEST AS THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE BY WEDNESDAY  
NIGHT'S BACKDOOR COLD FRONT. IN ADDITION, MONSOON FLOW WILL  
STRENGTHEN ALOFT ON THURSDAY AS A CLOSED UPPER LEVEL LOW PRESSURE  
SYSTEM STALLED OVER THE UPPER BAJA PENINSULA BEGINS TO MOVE  
TOWARD THE FOUR CORNERS. HIGH TEMPERATURES ARE FORECAST TO FALL  
FROM NEAR TO AROUND 9 DEGREES BELOW AVERAGE ON THURSDAY AS  
NUMEROUS SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS OCCUR FROM THE EAST SLOPES OF  
THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN WESTWARD, WITH SCATTERED TO ISOLATED  
ACTIVITY FARTHER EAST. SOME STORMS WILL BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING  
TORRENTIAL RAINFALL WITH RAIN AT RATES OVER 2 INCHES PER HOUR ON  
THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. MODELS PAINT THE HEAVIEST  
PRECIPITATION ON THURSDAY ALONG AND EAST OF THE NORTHERN  
MOUNTAINS, WHERE A DISTURBANCE EMBEDDED IN THE MONSOON FLOW IS  
EXPECTED TO CROSS. LATER SHIFTS WILL NEED TO KEEP AN EYE ON THIS  
DAY AND CONSIDER SOME FLOOD WATCHES FOR FLASH FLOODING, AT LEAST  
FOR RECENT BURN SCARS.  
 
THE BAJA LOW WILL TAKE ITS TIME TO CROSS AZ AND THE FOUR CORNERS  
FRIDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, AND PROBABLY WON'T SHIFT EAST OF THE CO  
ROCKIES UNTIL SUNDAY. RICH MONSOON FLOW WILL CONTINUE TO CROSS THE  
FORECAST AREA IN THE PROCESS WITH SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS SHOWERS  
AND THUNDERSTORMS, SOME CAPABLE OF PRODUCING LOCALLY HEAVY  
RAINFALL, MOSTLY DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING EACH DAY THROUGH  
THE WEEKEND. TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN ON THE COOL SIDE, ALTHOUGH  
A FEW DEGREES OF WARMING ARE FORECAST AREAWIDE ON SUNDAY AS SOME  
DRIER AIR BEGINS TO WORK ITS WAY OVER THE FORECAST AREA FROM THE  
WEST.  
 
EARLY IN THE COMING WORK WEEK, A MID LEVEL HIGH PRESSURE SYSTEM  
WILL BUILD OVER NM. AN INEFFICIENT PROCESS OF MOISTURE RECYCLING  
SHOULD CAUSE PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES TO CONTINUE TO TREND  
DOWNWARD, WITH ISOLATED TO WIDELY SCATTERED SHOWERS AND STORMS  
DEVELOPING MAINLY FROM THE EAST SLOPES OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN  
CHAIN WESTWARD EACH AFTERNOON AND EVENING. HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL  
ALSO TREND WARMER, REACHING A FEW TO 9 DEGREES ABOVE 30-YEAR  
AVERAGES BY TUESDAY AFTERNOON.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
(06Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 1126 PM MDT TUE JUL 15 2025  
 
THE LAST FEW SHOWERS OF THE NIGHT SHOULD DISSIPATE WITHIN THE NEXT  
FEW HOURS. LIGHT WINDS AND VFR CONDITIONS WILL PREVAIL THROUGH THE  
OVERNIGHT HOURS AROUND THE REGION.  
 
TOMORROW'S CROP OF STORMS WILL DEVELOP OVER THE WESTERN AND  
NORTHERN MOUNTAINS AROUND 18Z. STORM MOTION WILL BE SLOW AND  
ERRATIC, WITH THE HIGHEST COVERAGE IN WESTERN AND NORTHEASTERN NM.  
GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS OF 30 TO 40 KTS WILL BE COMMONPLACE WITH ANY  
SHOWERS AND STORMS THAT DEVELOP. STORMS WILL LIKELY PERSIST WELL  
PAST 00Z TOMORROW IN THE NORTHEASTERN QUADRANT OF THE STATE THANKS  
TO A BACKDOOR COLD FRONTAL INTRUSION.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 1220 PM MDT TUE JUL 15 2025  
 
MOIST MONSOON FLOW WILL STRENGTHEN WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY,  
THEN REMAIN FAIRLY RICH THROUGH SATURDAY, BEFORE DRIER AIR BEGINS  
TO MAKE ITS WAY OVER THE FORECAST AREA FROM THE WEST SUNDAY.  
WETTING RAIN WILL FAVOR ALL AREAS EXCEPT SOUTHERN PARTS OF THE  
EAST CENTRAL PLAINS THROUGH THE WET PERIOD, AND THURSDAY SHOULD BE  
THE DAY WITH THE HEAVIEST RAINFALL OVERALL. AFTER COOL  
TEMPERATURES DURING THE LATTER HALF OF THE WEEK, READINGS WILL  
CLIMB ABOVE AVERAGE AGAIN EARLY NEXT WEEK AS A MID-LEVEL HIGH  
PRESSURE SYSTEM BUILDS OVER NM.  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
FARMINGTON...................... 63 95 64 91 / 10 10 20 30  
DULCE........................... 48 92 49 88 / 30 40 30 80  
CUBA............................ 57 90 58 86 / 20 30 40 80  
GALLUP.......................... 54 89 56 85 / 40 60 60 70  
EL MORRO........................ 55 85 56 82 / 50 70 60 90  
GRANTS.......................... 56 90 57 85 / 30 50 60 90  
QUEMADO......................... 58 86 56 83 / 60 90 80 90  
MAGDALENA....................... 63 88 62 86 / 20 50 30 80  
DATIL........................... 58 85 54 83 / 40 80 50 80  
RESERVE......................... 54 89 52 88 / 50 90 70 90  
GLENWOOD........................ 58 92 57 92 / 50 90 60 80  
CHAMA........................... 48 84 49 80 / 30 50 40 90  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 62 86 62 81 / 20 40 40 90  
PECOS........................... 58 87 57 81 / 20 50 40 90  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 55 85 54 82 / 20 60 40 100  
RED RIVER....................... 47 75 46 72 / 20 60 50 90  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 41 78 43 74 / 10 60 50 90  
TAOS............................ 53 88 54 83 / 20 50 30 90  
MORA............................ 52 83 50 78 / 10 60 40 90  
ESPANOLA........................ 60 95 61 90 / 20 40 30 80  
SANTA FE........................ 62 88 62 84 / 20 40 40 90  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 60 92 61 88 / 20 40 30 80  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 69 95 68 91 / 20 30 20 70  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 67 96 70 92 / 20 20 20 50  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 66 98 67 94 / 20 20 20 40  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 68 97 68 93 / 20 20 20 40  
BELEN........................... 64 97 64 95 / 20 20 20 40  
BERNALILLO...................... 66 98 68 94 / 20 30 20 60  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 63 97 64 94 / 20 20 20 40  
CORRALES........................ 67 98 68 94 / 20 20 20 50  
LOS LUNAS....................... 65 97 66 94 / 20 20 20 40  
PLACITAS........................ 65 94 65 90 / 20 30 30 70  
RIO RANCHO...................... 67 97 68 93 / 20 20 20 50  
SOCORRO......................... 68 98 69 96 / 20 20 20 50  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 60 89 59 85 / 20 30 30 80  
TIJERAS......................... 61 90 62 85 / 20 30 30 80  
EDGEWOOD........................ 56 90 57 86 / 20 30 40 80  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 54 92 56 87 / 20 30 40 70  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 58 85 57 80 / 20 30 40 70  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 58 89 59 84 / 30 30 30 70  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 58 88 59 84 / 20 30 30 70  
CARRIZOZO....................... 65 91 64 87 / 10 30 20 50  
RUIDOSO......................... 59 84 59 80 / 5 40 10 70  
CAPULIN......................... 55 84 53 79 / 30 50 60 80  
RATON........................... 55 89 54 81 / 20 50 50 80  
SPRINGER........................ 55 90 56 82 / 20 40 40 80  
LAS VEGAS....................... 55 86 54 80 / 20 40 40 80  
CLAYTON......................... 63 92 59 81 / 20 20 60 40  
ROY............................. 58 88 59 82 / 10 20 40 60  
CONCHAS......................... 66 95 65 90 / 10 5 40 40  
SANTA ROSA...................... 63 93 64 88 / 20 10 30 50  
TUCUMCARI....................... 63 93 62 88 / 5 0 30 20  
CLOVIS.......................... 66 96 66 91 / 5 0 10 20  
PORTALES........................ 66 96 66 91 / 0 0 10 10  
FORT SUMNER..................... 66 95 67 92 / 5 5 10 20  
ROSWELL......................... 70 100 72 97 / 0 0 5 10  
PICACHO......................... 63 93 64 90 / 0 20 5 30  
ELK............................. 60 89 61 88 / 0 30 5 50  
 

 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
NONE.  

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...44  
LONG TERM....44  
AVIATION...16  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NM Page Main Text Page