356  
FXUS65 KABQ 172007  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
207 PM MDT THU JUL 17 2025  
   
..NEW SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, AVIATION, FIRE WEATHER  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
UPDATED AT 202 PM MDT THU JUL 17 2025  
 
- NUMEROUS SHOWERS AND STORMS TODAY AND FRIDAY WILL INCREASE THE  
RISK OF FLASH FLOODING, PARTICULARLY OVER RECENT BURN SCARS AND  
IN NORTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.  
 
- GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS, SMALL HAIL, AND DANGEROUS LIGHTNING COULD  
ACCOMPANY ANY STORMS EACH DAY AND A FEW STORMS MAY BECOME SEVERE  
IN THE NORTHEAST THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING.  
 
- A LOW TO MODERATE RISK OF BURN SCAR OF FLASH FLOODING WILL  
PERSIST INTO THE EARLY AND MIDDLE PART OF NEXT WEEK DESPITE A  
DOWNTICK IN STORM COVERAGE.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(THIS EVENING THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 202 PM MDT THU JUL 17 2025  
 
THUNDERSTORMS ARE ALREADY UNDERWAY OVER THE SANGRE DE CRISTO  
MOUNTAINS AND SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS THIS AFTERNOON, WHERE THERE IS  
CURRENTLY A FLOOD WATCH IN EFFECT AND A FLASH FLOOD WARNING HAS  
ALREADY BEEN ISSUED. STORM ACTIVITY FOR THE RUIDOSO AREA WILL BE  
MAINLY DURING THE MIDDLE PART OF THE AFTERNOON, WITH SHOWER ACTIVITY  
TAPERING OFF BEFORE SUNSET. LOW LEVEL UPSLOPE FLOW ALONG EASTERN NEW  
MEXICO WILL CONTINUE TO PROVIDE RICH MOISTURE FOR STORM DEVELOPMENT  
OVER THE HIGH TERRAIN. THE LOW CLOUDS OVER EASTERN NEW MEXICO FROM  
THIS MORNING HAVE ALL BUT ERODED, WITH DAYTIME HEATING QUICKLY  
DESTABILIZING THE ENVIRONMENT. RAP MODEL SOUNDINGS INDICATE  
PRECIPITABLE WATER CONTENT OF ABOUT 1.2 INCHES AND MUCAPE BETWEEN  
1000 AND 2000 J/KG, ALLOWING FOR VERY EFFICIENT RAINFALL RATES OF OF  
1 TO 2 INCHES PER HOUR. AS A RESULT THERE IS HIGH CONFIDENCE FOR  
LIFE THREATENING IMPACTS FOR BURN SCAR FLASH FLOODING.  
 
CONDITIONS IN NORTHEAST NEW MEXICO ARE NOT ONLY ALSO PRIMED FOR  
HEAVY AND EFFICIENT RAINFALL, BUT THERE IS ALSO A MARGINAL RISK OF  
SEVERE WEATHER FOR AREAS ALONG THE SANGRES AND EAST TOWARDS THE  
TEXAS-NEW MEXICO BORDER. STORMS ARE ALREADY PRODUCING RAINFALL RATE  
OF HALF AN INCH TO AN INCH PER HOUR, WHICH MAY LEAD TO RAPID RISES  
IN STREAMS AND ARROYOS AND FLOODING OVER LOW WATER CROSSINGS. STORMS  
OVER THE SANGRE DE CRISTO MOUNTAINS LOOK TO LINGER A LITTLE BIT  
LATER INTO THE AFTERNOON BEFORE MOVING OFF TO THE EAST AT AROUND  
SUNSET. LINGERING CLOUD COVER OVER COLFAX, UNION, AND HARDING  
COUNTIES MAY LIMIT INSTABILITY IN THE ENVIRONMENT, BUT MUCAPE MAY  
STILL REACH AS HIGH AS 3000 J/KG. WITH MODEST BULK SHEAR OF AROUND  
20 KTS, THESE STORMS MAY GET STRONG ENOUGH TO PRODUCE LARGE AND  
DAMAGING HAIL AND STRONG WIND GUSTS.THUNDERSTORMS WILL CONTINUE EAST  
TO THE TEXAS BORDER THROUGH MIDNIGHT, WHICH IS WHEN THE FLOOD WATCH  
EXPIRES. HAVE OPTED TO INCLUDE QUAY COUNTY IN THE WATCH FOR TONIGHT  
DUE TO ANTECEDENT RAINFALL FROM LAST NIGHT (ESTIMATED BETWEEN 2 AND  
5 INCHES) SATURATING THE SOILS AND UP TO ANOTHER IS INCH POSSIBLE  
THIS EVENING. OVERALL MOST OF NORTHEAST NEW MEXICO WILL SEE BETWEEN  
0.25 AND 0.5 INCHES OF RAINFALL, BUT LOCALLY HEAVY AMOUNTS OF 1 TO 2  
INCHES WILL CREATE SWIFT RISES IN STREAM AND ARROYOS.  
 
TOMORROW ALSO LOOKS TO BE A CONCERNING DAY FOR THE RUIDOSO BURN  
SCARS AREA. NEW MEXICO WILL FIND ITSELF IN BETWEEN A STRENGTHENING  
595 DM H5 HIGH OVER THE TEXAS PANHANDLE AND A LOW MOVING NORTH OVER  
BAJA CALIFORNIA. THIS WILL ONCE AGAIN PROVIDE A CORRIDOR FOR RICH  
MOISTURE FROM BOTH GULFS TO FUNNEL UP INTO SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO. THE  
POSITIONING OF THE LOW TO THE WEST MAY SERVE TO USHER IN GREATER  
PACIFIC MOISTURE INTO THE REGION, BUT IT MAY ALSO DRY OUT THE  
ENVIRONMENT WITH SOME WNW FLOW. OVERALL, PWATS IN SOUTHERN NEW  
MEXICO LOOK TO ONCE AGAIN BE IN THE 1.1 TO 1.4 RANGE, WITH MOIST  
UPSLOPE FLOW CONVERGING OVER THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS. STORM  
ACTIVITY WILL FOCUS OVER THE BEGGING AND MIDDLE PART OF THE  
AFTERNOON. HI-RES MODEL GUIDANCE IS IN PRETTY GOOD AGREEMENT THAT  
THE RUIDOSO AREA MAY GET BETWEEN 0.25 AND 0.75 INCHES OF RAIN. MORE  
CONCERNING , 3 HOUR QPF MAXES FROM THE HREF AND NBM HAVE UP TO 2  
INCHES FOR AREAS IN AND AROUND THE BURN SCAR, WHICH MAY CREATE  
DANGEROUS FLOODING ALONG THE RIO RUIDOSO. DRIER WESTERLY FLOW LOOKS  
TO STYMIE CONVECTION FOR AREAS NORTH OF I-40 IN WESTERN NEW MEXICO.  
NORTHEAST NEW MEXICO WILL SEE SOME SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS SHOWERS,  
BUT COVERAGE AND AMOUNTS LOOKS TO BE MUCH LESS THAN THURSDAY, SO  
FLOOD CONCERNS ARE LOW AT THIS TIME.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY)  
ISSUED AT 202 PM MDT THU JUL 17 2025  
 
HEADING INTO THE WEEKEND, THE H5 HIGH WILL CONTINUE TO LINGER AROUND  
THE TX-NM BORDER AT AROUND 593 TO 595 DM, RAISING TEMPERATURES IN  
THE EASTERN PLAINS TO THE UPPER 90S AND NEAR 100 FOR ROSWELL . THE  
LOW OVER BAJA LOOKS TO FINALLY EJECT INTO THE GREAT BASIN, SHIFTING  
WINDS MORE WESTERLY THROUGHOUT THE REGION AND BRINING IN SOME DRIER  
CONDITIONS, PARTICULARLY FOR EASTERN NEW MEXICO. MOIST SOUTHERLY  
FLOW WILL CONTINUE TO KEEP RAIN CHANCES ABOVE 50% FOR SOUTHERN AREAS  
IN THE GILA AND SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS. THE GILA MAY BENEFIT THE MOST  
FORM THE PACIFIC MOISTURE, BUT NE STORM MOTIONS MAY BE ABLE TO TAKE  
SOME SHOWERS INTO WEST-CENTRAL AND NORTH CENTRAL NEW MEXICO.  
 
PWATS HEADING INTO NEXT WEEK LOOK TO REMAIN NEAR NORMAL FOR THE LAND  
OF ENCHANTMENT, AND RECENT ENSEMBLE RUNS ARE SHOWING THAT CONDITIONS  
MAY NOT BE DRYING OUT AS MUCH AS PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT. MONSOONAL  
MOISTURE WILL CONTINUE TO PUSH NORTH ACROSS NEW MEXICO HEADING INTO  
THE MIDDLE OF THE WEEK, CREATING SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS  
THUNDERSTORMS, PARTICULARLY FOR SOUTHERN AREAS. BUMPED UP POPS A BIT  
FOR EASTERN AREAS DURING THE AFTERNOONS TO ACCOUNT FOR A MENTION OF  
STORMS DUE TO RECENT GUIDANCE TRENDS. TEMPERATURES THROUGHOUT THE  
PERIOD WILL BE ABOUT AVERAGE FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(18Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 202 PM MDT THU JUL 17 2025  
 
THUNDERSTORMS ARE CURRENTLY ONGOING THROUGHOUT MOST OF NEW MEXICO.  
THERE IS A MENTION OF THUNDER AND GUSTY AND ERRATIC WINDS FOR EACH  
TAF SITE THIS AFTERNOON. STORM ACTIVITY SHOULD TAPER OFF AT MOST  
SITES AT AROUND SUNSET, BUT ACTIVITY LOOKS TO PERSIST INTO THE  
EVENING AT KTCC. ALL SITES ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN AT VFR THROUGHOUT  
THE PERIOD, BUT SOME LOWER CEILINGS NEAR MVFR CRITERIA COULD ROLL IN  
OVERNIGHT FOR KLVS AND KTCC. MID LEVEL CLOUDS WILL PERSIST OVER  
MOST AREAS THROUGHOUT THE EVENING. WINDS WILL BECOME LIGHT AND  
VARIABLE OVER NIGHT BEFORE WINDS BEGIN TO PICKUP FROM THE SW LATE  
TOMORROW MORNING.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 202 PM MDT THU JUL 17 2025  
 
THE THREAT OF RAPID FIRE SPREAD WILL BE MINIMAL THROUGHOUT THE  
PERIOD. RICH MONSOONAL MOISTURE WILL CREATE SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS  
THUNDERSTORMS AROUND THE REGION FOR THE NEXT FEW DAYS. AREAS ALONG  
AND EAST OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN WILL SEE 0.25 TO AN INCH OF  
RAINFALL OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF AFTERNOONS. SOME DRYER WESTERLY  
FLOW MAY INTRUDE INTO THE REGION EARLY THIS WEEKEND, HINDERING  
CHANCES FOR STORMS IN NORTHERN AND CENTRAL NEW MEXICO. NEW  
LIGHTING STARTS WILL BE POSSIBLE WITH STORMS IN WESTERN AREAS  
WHERE ERCS ARE STILL IN THE 75TH AND 90TH PERCENTILES. NORTHERN  
NEW MEXICO MAY SEE SOME DRIER CONDITIONS EARLY NEXT WEEK, BUT NEAR  
AVERAGE MONSOONAL MOISTURE WILL ONCE AGAIN INCREASE CHANCES FOR  
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. TEMPERATURES LOOK TO REMAIN NEAR  
AVERAGE THROUGHOUT THE PERIOD.  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
FARMINGTON...................... 66 91 66 91 / 50 20 30 20  
DULCE........................... 50 88 50 89 / 70 50 40 60  
CUBA............................ 57 85 59 85 / 70 50 50 60  
GALLUP.......................... 53 87 56 85 / 50 40 40 50  
EL MORRO........................ 55 83 57 82 / 70 60 60 80  
GRANTS.......................... 55 88 58 86 / 70 60 50 70  
QUEMADO......................... 56 83 60 82 / 70 70 70 90  
MAGDALENA....................... 63 84 63 85 / 60 60 60 80  
DATIL........................... 55 82 58 81 / 60 80 60 90  
RESERVE......................... 54 90 56 87 / 50 70 60 90  
GLENWOOD........................ 58 94 61 93 / 40 70 50 90  
CHAMA........................... 48 81 50 82 / 70 60 40 70  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 60 81 62 83 / 70 50 40 70  
PECOS........................... 57 83 59 85 / 60 60 30 60  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 54 83 56 84 / 70 60 30 70  
RED RIVER....................... 45 74 47 74 / 70 70 30 80  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 43 77 43 77 / 60 70 20 70  
TAOS............................ 54 85 55 86 / 70 50 30 60  
MORA............................ 50 81 52 82 / 70 60 20 70  
ESPANOLA........................ 61 91 62 92 / 70 40 30 50  
SANTA FE........................ 61 85 63 86 / 60 50 30 60  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 60 88 61 90 / 60 40 30 50  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 68 91 70 92 / 70 50 50 60  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 67 93 68 94 / 70 40 40 50  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 66 95 68 96 / 60 40 40 40  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 68 94 69 94 / 70 40 40 50  
BELEN........................... 65 94 65 95 / 60 40 40 40  
BERNALILLO...................... 66 94 68 95 / 70 40 40 50  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 64 94 65 95 / 60 40 40 40  
CORRALES........................ 67 95 68 95 / 70 40 40 50  
LOS LUNAS....................... 66 94 66 95 / 60 40 40 40  
PLACITAS........................ 64 90 66 91 / 60 40 40 50  
RIO RANCHO...................... 66 94 68 95 / 70 40 40 50  
SOCORRO......................... 68 95 68 95 / 60 50 50 50  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 58 86 61 87 / 60 50 40 60  
TIJERAS......................... 61 86 62 87 / 70 50 40 60  
EDGEWOOD........................ 56 87 58 87 / 60 50 30 50  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 55 88 57 88 / 50 50 30 50  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 57 82 59 82 / 50 50 20 40  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 57 86 60 87 / 60 60 40 60  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 58 85 60 86 / 60 60 40 60  
CARRIZOZO....................... 65 87 64 89 / 40 60 40 50  
RUIDOSO......................... 58 78 58 81 / 30 80 30 60  
CAPULIN......................... 54 83 56 84 / 70 40 10 50  
RATON........................... 53 86 55 87 / 70 50 10 60  
SPRINGER........................ 55 89 57 89 / 70 40 10 50  
LAS VEGAS....................... 55 85 57 86 / 60 50 20 50  
CLAYTON......................... 62 89 66 92 / 60 10 5 10  
ROY............................. 59 87 61 89 / 70 20 10 20  
CONCHAS......................... 65 94 68 96 / 60 20 5 10  
SANTA ROSA...................... 63 90 65 92 / 50 20 10 20  
TUCUMCARI....................... 63 92 66 94 / 60 10 5 0  
CLOVIS.......................... 67 94 68 96 / 40 5 0 0  
PORTALES........................ 67 95 68 97 / 40 5 0 0  
FORT SUMNER..................... 67 94 68 95 / 40 10 5 5  
ROSWELL......................... 71 96 70 98 / 30 20 5 5  
PICACHO......................... 63 88 63 90 / 30 50 20 20  
ELK............................. 61 86 60 88 / 30 60 20 30  
 
 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
FLOOD WATCH UNTIL MIDNIGHT MDT TONIGHT FOR NMZ214-215-227>232-  
234.  
 
FLOOD WATCH UNTIL 6 PM MDT THIS EVENING FOR NMZ226.  
 
FLOOD WATCH FROM FRIDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH FRIDAY EVENING FOR  
NMZ226.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...25  
LONG TERM....25  
AVIATION...25  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NM Page
Main Text Page