689  
FXUS65 KABQ 110534 AAB  
AFDABQ  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM  
1134 PM MDT WED SEP 10 2025  
   
..NEW AVIATION
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
UPDATED AT 1128 PM MDT WED SEP 10 2025  
 
- WIDESPREAD STORMS LIKELY WEDNESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, WITH THE  
HIGHEST RAINFALL EXPECTED IN THE NORTHWEST. STRONG TO SEVERE  
STORMS MAY PRODUCE GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS AND LARGE HAIL EACH  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING. THERE WILL BE A LOW RISK OF FLASH  
FLOODING IN WESTERN AND NORTHERN AREAS AS WELL.  
 
- DRIER WEATHER ACROSS WESTERN AND CENTRAL NEW MEXICO SATURDAY  
WITH SCATTERED SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM COVERAGE ALONG AND EAST  
OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN. SOME STORMS MAY BECOME SEVERE IN  
EASTERN NEW MEXICO ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
- AFTER A BRIEF BREAK IN STORMS SUNDAY, FORECAST CONFIDENCE IS  
INCREASING THAT RAIN CHANCES WILL RETURN TO THE REGION EARLY  
NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
 
(THIS EVENING THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 233 PM MDT WED SEP 10 2025  
 
MOIST INSTABILITY (AS EVIDENCED BY MORNING ALTOCUMULUS) HAS ALLOWED  
FOR THE QUICK DEVELOPMENT OF SCATTERED SHOWERS AND STORMS OVER THE  
WESTERN HIGH TERRAIN EARLY THIS AFTERNOON, WITH ANOTHER CROP OF  
STORMS FOCUSING ALONG THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN. AN EARLY SEASON  
TROUGH IS CURRENTLY SPINNING OVER NORTHERN CA AND WILL CONTINUE  
DIGGING SOUTHEASTWARD TODAY. THIS HAS RESULTED IN INCREASED SHEAR  
OVER NORTHWESTERN NM WHERE 25-35KTS OF BULK SHEAR OVER THE FOUR  
CORNERS COULD SUPPORT THE DEVELOPMENT OF FAST-MOVING STRONG TO  
SEVERE STORMS. MID-LEVEL LAPSE ARE IMPRESSIVE AGAIN (AROUND 8C/KM ON  
THE 18Z SOUNDING AT KABQ) SO STORMS WILL NOT STRUGGLE TO GROW TALL  
ENOUGH TO PRODUCE SMALL HAIL. THE LIMITING FACTOR WITH REGARD TO  
STORM STRENGTH TODAY WILL BE THE DRY AIR ALOFT. SHEAR COULD HELP TO  
MITIGATE SOME OF THESE CONCERNS IN THE NORTHWEST, BUT LESS SO IN  
CENTRAL NEW MEXICO.  
 
STORMS OVER THE SOUTH-CENTRAL MOUNTAINS WILL BE SLOWER-MOVING CLOSER  
TO THE CENTER OF THE H5 HIGH. MODELS HAVE BEEN CONSISTENTLY KEEPING  
STORMS OFF THE SENSITIVE RUIDOSO ARE BURN SCARS, BUT RE-DEVELOPING  
SHOWERS COULD EASILY MOVE OVER THE SCARS LATER TODAY, WITH THE  
GREATEST CONCERN OVER THE SALT SCAR. STORMS WILL LIKELY PERSIST INTO  
THE LATE EVENING HOURS AGAIN TONIGHT, WITH THE HIGHEST CONFIDENCE IN  
CENTRAL NM ALONG AND JUST EAST OF THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY AND IN THE  
FAR NORTHWEST CORNER OF THE STATE.  
 
A MOISTURE PLUME WILL TIGHTEN UP OVER WESTERN NM ON THURSDAY AS THE  
AFORMENTIONED TROUGH CONTINUES ITS TREK SOUTHEASTWARD. DIVERGENCE  
ALOFT WILL BE THE DRIVER OF PRECIPITATION, BUT POCKETS OF  
INSTABILITY WILL HELP TO CREATE LOCALIZED HEAVIER RAINFALL RATES IN  
WESTERN AND CENTRAL NM. GIVEN STRONG SPEED SHEAR, A FEW SUPERCELLS  
MAY DEVELOP WEST OF THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY AND PRODUCE DAMAGING WIND  
GUSTS. INSTABILITY MAY BE SLIGHTLY LOWER THAN TODAY, BUT AREAS ON  
THE FRINGES OF THE MAIN MOISTURE PLUME SHOULD DESTABILIZE QUITE WELL  
WHEN TEMPS WARM IN THE AFTERNOON. IT SHOULD BE DRIER IN EASTERN NM  
THANKS TO DRY AIR ADVECTION FROM THE SOUTH, BUT THERE COULD BE A FEW  
POP-UP SHOWERS OVER THE HIGH TERRAIN OF THE CENTRAL MOUNTAIN CHAIN  
IN THE EARLY AFTERNOON HOURS. GIVEN THE SYNOPTIC-SCALE FORCING,  
STORMS WILL MOST LIKELY PERSIST INTO THE LATE EVENING AND OVERNIGHT  
HOURS IN AT LEAST THE NORTHWEST THIRD OF THE STATE ON THURSDAY  
AFTERNOON.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM
 
 
(FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY)  
ISSUED AT 233 PM MDT WED SEP 10 2025  
 
FRIDAY WILL BE ANOTHER ACTIVE DAY AS AN EARLY SEASON TROUGH  
CONTINUES ITS JOURNEY INTO THE DESERT SOUTHWEST. THE LACK OF  
INSTABILITY SHOULD LIMIT STORM HEIGHT, BUT EFFICIENT RAINFALL RATES  
GIVEN THE HIGH PWAT ENVIRONMENT AND LARGE SCALE FORCING FROM THE  
APPROACHING TROUGH WILL SUPPORT RAINFALL RATES UP TO 1.5" AT TIMES.  
MOST OF THIS RAINFALL WILL BE BENEFICIAL CONSIDERING THAT WESTERN NM  
HAS BEEN VERY DRY THIS WINTER, BUT THE PARCHED SOIL WILL LIKELY  
STRUGGLE TO ABSORB ALL THIS RUNOFF, LIKELY LEADING TO LOCALIZED  
FLASH FLOOD CONCERNS. TRAINING WILL BE REQUIRED FOR SIGNIFICANT  
IMPACTS TO OCCUR GIVEN THE FAST STORM MOTION (25-35KTS) SO THAT WILL  
BE SOMETHING TO WATCH CLOSELY AS WE MOVE CLOSER. SPC HAS INTRODUCED  
A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE STORMS FOR FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN  
NORTHWESTERN NM GIVEN THE STRONG SHEAR (40-50KTS). SPEED SHEAR IS  
QUITE STRONG, BUT THE POSITIVE TILT OF THE APPROACHING TROUGH MEANS  
DIRECTIONAL SHEAR WILL BE LACKING AND WOULD INCREASE THE THREAT OF  
ANY SUPERCELLS DEVELOPING. MODEL GUIDANCE HAS BEEN HINTING AT STORMS  
CLUSTERING TOGETHER FRIDAY EVENING AND MOVING EASTWARD ALONG A  
PACIFIC FRONT. INCREASINGLY STRONG JET DYNAMICS WILL PLAY A STRONG  
ROLE IN STORM PERSISTENCE (OR DISSIPATION) SO THE EXACT TRACK OF THE  
UPPER-LOW WILL BE ANOTHER FACTOR TO WATCH CLOSELY. THE EPS AND GEFS  
HAVE HAD STRONG DISAGREEMENT OVER THE STORM TRACK, BUT HAVE BEGUN TO  
FALL INTO BETTER AGREEMENT WITHIN THE PAST 24 HOURS WITH THE EPS  
MOVING THE UPPER-LOW FASTER AND THE GEFS MOVING THE UPPER-LOW MORE  
SLOWLY.  
 
THE REGION WILL DRY OUT FROM WEST TO EAST ON SATURDAY, WITH  
POTENTIAL STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS IN EASTERN NM WHERE AMPLE MOISTURE  
WILL INTERACT WITH THE EXITING TROUGH. IT STILL LOOKS LIKE THERE  
WILL BE A BREAK IN THE ACTION SUNDAY BEFORE MOISTURE RETURNS EARLY  
NEXT WEEK. THERE IS HIGH UNCERTAINTY WITH REGARD TO THE UPPER-LEVEL  
PATTERN FROM MONDAY ONWARD SO FORECAST CONFIDENCE REMAINS LOW.  
AROUND HALF OF GEFS AND GEPS MEMBERS ARE SHOWING ANOTHER ANOMALOUSLY  
DEEP TROUGH OVER THE GREAT BASIN EARLY NEXT WEEK, WHICH WOULD ACT TO  
QUICKLY DRAW ANOTHER SLUG OF MID-LEVEL MOISTURE NORTHWARD INTO NEW  
MEXICO. HOWEVER, THE MAJORITY OF MODELS (AROUND 70%) ARE SHOWING A  
WEAK TROUGH OR QUASI-ZONAL FLOW WOULD WOULD RESULT IN MOISTURE  
SLOWLY RETURNING TO NEW MEXICO EARLY TO MID-NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
(06Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 1128 PM MDT WED SEP 10 2025  
 
SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY HAS REDUCED AND DWINDLED TO  
NORTHWESTERN AND NORTH CENTRAL AREAS OF NEW MEXICO. LIGHTNING  
ACTIVITY IS DECREASING, SIGNIFYING ACTIVITY IS WEAKER THAN A FEW  
HOURS AGO, BUT A FEW SHOWERS OR STRAY STORMS WILL PERIODICALLY  
REDEVELOP INTO THE EARLY MORNING HOURS THURSDAY. LOW LEVEL WIND  
SHEAR WILL IMPACT EASTERN PLAINS AIRPORTS OVERNIGHT AS A LOW LEVEL  
JET (A BELT OF HIGHER WIND SPEEDS JUST A COUPLE THOUSAND FEET  
ABOVE THE SURFACE) DEVELOPS. THIS LOW LEVEL WIND SHEAR WILL FADE  
INTO THE LATE MORNING THURSDAY AS VERTICAL MIXING PROCESSES IN THE  
ATMOSPHERE RESUME. ADDITIONAL SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL  
REDEVELOP THURSDAY AFTERNOON WITH THE NORTHWESTERN AREAS OF NEW  
MEXICO BEING FAVORED AS AN UNSEASONABLY STRONG UPPER LEVEL TROUGH  
APPROACHES. A FEW STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS WILL BE OBSERVED IN  
THESE NORTHWESTERN AREAS THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING WITH  
DAMAGING DOWNBURST WINDS, HAIL, AND BRIEF HEAVY DOWNPOURS  
ACCOMPANYING.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 233 PM MDT WED SEP 10 2025  
 
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE NOT EXPECTED THROUGH THE NEXT 7  
DAYS. WIDESPREAD SHOWERS AND STORMS ARE LIKELY EACH AFTERNOON  
THROUGH SATURDAY, WITH THE GREATEST COVERAGE IN WESTERN AND  
NORTHERN NEW MEXICO. WIDESPREAD WETTING RAINFALL IS LIKELY AND MULTI-  
DAY RAINFALL TOTALS WILL LIKELY EXCEED 1" IN THE TUSAS AND JEMEZ  
MOUNTAINS WHERE THE HEAVIEST AND MOST PERSISTENT RAINFALL IS  
FORECAST. BREEZY SOUTHERLY WINDS WILL PREVAIL THE AREA TODAY THROUGH  
FRIDAY AS AN UPPER-LEVEL TROUGH APPROACHES, BUT FAST-MOVING STORMS  
(FROM THE SOUTH TO NORTH) WILL HELP TO MIX STRONGER WINDS DOWN TO  
THE SURFACE. A FEW STORMS MAY BECOME SEVERE EACH DAY THROUGH FRIDAY  
IN CENTRAL AND WESTERN NM AND IN EASTERN NM ON SATURDAY. AFTER A  
BRIEF BREAK IN STORMS ON SUNDAY. MOISTURE LOOKS TO RETURN ON MONDAY  
AND TUESDAY (MODERATE CONFIDENCE).  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
FARMINGTON...................... 61 84 59 77 / 50 80 60 80  
DULCE........................... 48 78 48 71 / 60 80 70 80  
CUBA............................ 54 82 53 77 / 30 50 60 80  
GALLUP.......................... 53 81 52 76 / 20 60 50 70  
EL MORRO........................ 54 78 53 74 / 20 70 60 80  
GRANTS.......................... 54 82 53 77 / 20 60 50 90  
QUEMADO......................... 54 82 53 78 / 20 40 40 70  
MAGDALENA....................... 60 82 58 80 / 10 10 20 60  
DATIL........................... 53 80 52 76 / 10 30 20 70  
RESERVE......................... 53 86 52 83 / 10 20 30 50  
GLENWOOD........................ 58 90 57 87 / 20 30 30 50  
CHAMA........................... 48 73 47 68 / 50 70 70 80  
LOS ALAMOS...................... 59 79 57 76 / 20 30 30 60  
PECOS........................... 53 81 52 79 / 10 20 20 40  
CERRO/QUESTA.................... 52 78 51 76 / 20 30 30 50  
RED RIVER....................... 41 70 41 68 / 20 30 30 50  
ANGEL FIRE...................... 38 73 37 71 / 20 30 20 40  
TAOS............................ 52 81 52 78 / 20 30 30 40  
MORA............................ 49 77 48 74 / 10 30 20 40  
ESPANOLA........................ 56 87 55 83 / 20 20 20 50  
SANTA FE........................ 58 82 57 79 / 20 20 20 50  
SANTA FE AIRPORT................ 56 86 55 83 / 20 20 20 40  
ALBUQUERQUE FOOTHILLS........... 64 88 63 85 / 20 20 20 50  
ALBUQUERQUE HEIGHTS............. 66 89 64 86 / 20 20 20 50  
ALBUQUERQUE VALLEY.............. 59 91 58 88 / 20 10 20 50  
ALBUQUERQUE WEST MESA........... 63 90 63 87 / 20 20 20 50  
BELEN........................... 61 91 61 89 / 10 10 20 40  
BERNALILLO...................... 62 90 61 87 / 20 20 20 50  
BOSQUE FARMS.................... 59 90 58 87 / 10 10 20 50  
CORRALES........................ 62 91 61 88 / 20 20 20 50  
LOS LUNAS....................... 60 90 60 88 / 10 10 20 40  
PLACITAS........................ 61 86 59 84 / 20 20 20 50  
RIO RANCHO...................... 63 89 63 86 / 20 20 20 50  
SOCORRO......................... 64 92 63 89 / 5 10 20 40  
SANDIA PARK/CEDAR CREST......... 58 82 57 79 / 10 20 20 50  
TIJERAS......................... 59 84 59 81 / 10 20 20 50  
EDGEWOOD........................ 54 83 54 81 / 10 20 20 40  
MORIARTY/ESTANCIA............... 51 85 50 82 / 10 20 20 40  
CLINES CORNERS.................. 55 80 53 78 / 10 20 20 30  
MOUNTAINAIR..................... 56 84 55 82 / 10 10 20 40  
GRAN QUIVIRA.................... 56 83 54 81 / 0 10 10 30  
CARRIZOZO....................... 61 86 59 84 / 5 10 5 20  
RUIDOSO......................... 52 79 51 77 / 5 20 10 30  
CAPULIN......................... 52 80 51 78 / 10 10 10 10  
RATON........................... 51 83 51 80 / 10 20 10 20  
SPRINGER........................ 52 86 53 83 / 20 20 10 20  
LAS VEGAS....................... 53 80 52 78 / 20 20 20 30  
CLAYTON......................... 61 89 60 86 / 20 0 0 0  
ROY............................. 57 84 57 82 / 30 5 0 10  
CONCHAS......................... 61 91 61 88 / 20 0 0 5  
SANTA ROSA...................... 59 87 59 85 / 20 0 0 10  
TUCUMCARI....................... 60 90 59 87 / 10 0 0 0  
CLOVIS.......................... 61 91 60 89 / 0 0 0 0  
PORTALES........................ 60 92 60 89 / 0 0 0 0  
FORT SUMNER..................... 61 91 60 88 / 5 0 0 0  
ROSWELL......................... 63 93 62 91 / 0 0 0 0  
PICACHO......................... 57 88 57 86 / 5 5 0 10  
ELK............................. 56 83 54 81 / 0 5 0 20  
 

 
   
ABQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
NONE.  

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...16  
LONG TERM....16  
AVIATION...52  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NM Page Main Text Page