566  
FXUS65 KBOI 270255  
AFDBOI  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BOISE ID  
855 PM MDT SUN OCT 26 2025  
   
DISCUSSION
 
THE LAST PART OF THIS PACIFIC STORM SYSTEM WILL  
CONTINUE TO MOVE ACROSS THE AREA TONIGHT, BRINGING WIDESPREAD  
LIGHT PRECIPITATION. OVERALL, PRECIPITATION ACCUMULATIONS HAVE  
BEEN MINIMAL ACROSS SOUTHEAST OREGON, WITH MOST SITES SEEING  
LESS THAN 0.05 INCH TOTAL SO FAR. THE LATEST HIGH RES QPF HAS  
LOWERED ABOUT 15 PERCENT OVER EARLIER RUNS, THUS WE HAVE LOWERED  
QPF IN LINE WITH THESE LATEST TRENDS.  
 
THE COLD FRONT REACHED BURNS, OREGON AROUND 8 PM AND SHOULD  
REACH BAKER CITY AROUND 9 PM AND BOISE/MCCALL AROUND MIDNIGHT  
TONIGHT. BRIEF MODERATE RAINFALL ALONG WITH WIND GUSTS UP TO 30  
MPH ARE POSSIBLE WITH THE FRONTAL PASSAGE. SNOW LEVEL LOOKS TO  
BE AROUND 5000 FEET THIS EVENING AND COULD LOWER TO NEAR 4000  
FEET BY THE TIME PRECIPITATION ENDS EARLY MONDAY MORNING.  
SHOWERS WILL CONTINUE ALONG NEVADA AND THE WESTERN MAGIC VALLEY  
THROUGH MID MONDAY MORNING. NO SIGNIFICANT CHANGES TO SNOW  
AMOUNTS ARE ANTICIPATED, WITH THE LONG VALLEY SEEING ABOUT 1  
INCH AND THE MOUNTAINS ABOVE 6000 FEET SEEING 3 TO 6 INCHES  
TONIGHT. THE UPDATE WILL BE OUT SHORTLY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
RAIN/SNOW ACROSS E OREGON AND SW IDAHO, CREATING LOW  
VFR/MVFR IN RAIN, IFR/LIFR IN MTN SNOW. LOCAL IFR AT KTWF/KJER. MTNS  
OBSCURED. SNOW LEVELS: 4500-5500 FT MSL LOWERING TO AROUND 3000-4500  
FT OVERNIGHT. IMPROVING CONDITIONS MONDAY MORNING. SURFACE WINDS: SW-  
SE 5-15 KT, BECOMING NW-W 5-15 KT WITH AREAS OF 20-30 KT GUSTS  
OVERNIGHT. WINDS ALOFT AT 10KFT MSL: W TO NW 20-35 KT.  
 
KBOI...RAIN SHOWERS WILL CREATE PERIODS OF MVFR CEILINGS AND  
FOOTHILL OBSCURATION. SHOWERS ENDING AROUND 27/08Z. LOWER CEILINGS  
WILL LIFT/DISSIPATE AFTER PRECIP ENDS. SURFACE WINDS: SE 5-15 KT,  
THEN W-NW 5-12 KT AFTER PRECIP ENDS. PERIODS OF 15-25 KT GUSTS  
BETWEEN 27/08Z-12Z.  
 

 
   
PREV DISCUSSION
 
 
SHORT TERM...TONIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT...AN UPPER  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH CROSSING OREGON THIS AFTERNOON WILL INCREASE  
PRECIPITATION COVERAGE ACROSS THE REGION AS IT MOVES EASTWARD  
THIS EVENING. THE BEST CHANCE FOR RAIN AND MTN SNOW FALLS AHEAD  
OF AN ACCOMPANYING FRONT. MODELED TIMING OF THE FRONTAL PASSAGE  
REMAINS CONSISTENT, BRINGING IT THROUGH SE OREGON LATE THIS  
EVENING (2000-2400MT), AND SW IDAHO OVERNIGHT (2300-0300MT).  
THE LIGHTNING THREAT REMAINS LOW (10-15%) ACROSS E-CENTRAL  
OREGON AND THE W-CENTRAL IDAHO MTNS WHERE TIMING WOULD BE MOST  
FAVORABLE. EVENT WITHOUT LIGHTNING, STRONGER SHOWERS ALONG THE  
FRONT COULD BRING MODERATE RAIN/SNOW RATES. SNOW LEVELS WILL  
DROP TO MTN VALLEY FLOORS THIS EVENING ALLOWING FOR A MIXED  
PRECIPITATION TYPE, THOUGH TEMPERATURES WILL INITIALLY LIMIT  
ACCUMULATION. THE HIGHER PRECIPITATION RATES ALONG THE FRONT  
WILL BRING THE BEST CHANCE FOR ACCUMULATION AND A QUICK INCH IS  
POSSIBLE IN INTERIOR MTN VALLEYS, TO INCLUDE CASCADE AND  
MCCALL. ABOVE 6KFT MSL AMOUNTS WILL TOTAL 3-5 INCHES THROUGH  
SUNRISE MONDAY. THE COLD FRONTAL PASSAGE WILL ALSO BRING A  
PERIOD OF GUSTY WINDS OVERNIGHT, MOSTLY CONTAINED IN THE 25-40  
MPH RANGE. LOCALLY HIGHER GUSTS TO 45 MPH ARE POSSIBLE IN THE  
MTNS.  
 
A 20-30% CHANCE OF SHOWERS CONTINUES IN THE E-CENTRAL OREGON  
AND W-CENTRAL IDAHO MTNS ON MONDAY UNDER NORTHWEST FLOW ALOFT.  
MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT IS DRY AS UPPER RIDGING  
BUILDS IN FROM THE COAST. MONDAY NIGHT WILL BE THE COLDEST WITH  
FREEZING TEMPERATURES LIKELY ACROSS ALL ZONES, INCLUDING A  
POSSIBLE HARD FREEZE FOR MANY SITES IN THE SNAKE PLAIN.  
TEMPERATURES THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT ARE 5-10 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL.  
 
LONG TERM...WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...THE EARLY PART OF THE  
LONG TERM WILL BE GENERALLY DRY WITH TEMPERATURES AROUND  
NORMAL. THIS IS DUE TO ZONAL FLOW BETWEEN SUBTROPICAL HIGH  
PRESSURE AND A STRENGTHENING ALASKAN LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM. A FEW  
WEAK SHORTWAVES PREVENT TEMPS FROM WARMING TOO MUCH DURING THIS  
PERIOD, AND BRING MILD BREEZES WEDNESDAY. FRIDAY AFTERNOON  
CLOUDS INCREASE AS VERY MOIST TROPICAL MOISTURE IS PULLED INTO  
THE STRONG FLOW OF THE ALASKAN LOW. MOST PRECIPITATION WITH THIS  
ATMOSPHERIC RIVER WILL IMPACT THE PACNW AND CANADIAN WEST  
COAST. HOWEVER, MODELS SHOW SPARSE RESIDUAL MOISTURE BRINGING  
PRECIPITATION TO NORTHERN PARTS OF OUR FORECAST AREA SATURDAY  
NIGHT. SUNDAY IS A RETURN TO DRY WEATHER WITH A RIDGE AXIS  
DEVELOPING OVER THE REGION AS ANOTHER WET SYSTEM SETS UP OFF IN  
THE NE PACIFIC.  
 
AVIATION...WIDESPREAD LIGHT PRECIPITATION IS STILL EXPECTED TO  
MOVE NORTH THIS AFTERNOON, THOUGH HAS BEEN A LITTLE SLOWER IN  
ITS MOTION THAN FORECAST. LIGHT VALLEY RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW  
WILL BE AUGMENTED BY SOME STRONGER SHOWERS THIS EVENING WITH  
MODERATE RAIN AND SNOW POSSIBLE NEAR KBKE AND KMYL. SNOW LEVELS  
ARE 5-6 KFT MSL. WIDESPREAD MVFR IN THE PRECIPITATION SHIELD  
WITH IFR-LIFR IN SNOW AND LOW CLOUDS. SURFACE WINDS: SE-SW 5-15  
KT, BECOMING W-NW 5-15 KT WITH GUSTS TO 30 KT AROUND MIDNIGHT.  
WINDS ALOFT AT 10KFT MSL: SW-W 15- 30KT.  
 
KBOI...LIGHT RAIN SLIGHTLY DELAYED, BUT STILL EXPECTED THIS  
AFTERNOON THROUGH SUNSET WHEN THE PRECIPITATION MODE BECOMES  
MORE SPORADIC/SHOWERY. CEILINGS COULD DROP TO MVFR WHEN THE  
RAIN ARRIVES, IMPROVING AFTER MIDNIGHT AS THE RAIN DISSIPATES.  
SURFACE WINDS ARE SE 5-15 KT, BECOMING NW 10-15 KT AROUND  
MIDNIGHT.  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
BAKER CITY 28 47 19 48 / 90 0 0 0  
BOISE 33 48 32 53 / 80 0 0 0  
BURNS 21 46 16 52 / 70 0 0 0  
CALDWELL 32 51 29 55 / 80 0 0 0  
FAIRFIELD 26 40 12 44 / 90 0 0 0  
IDAHO CITY 26 44 18 51 / 90 10 0 0  
JEROME 32 42 26 47 / 90 0 0 0  
MCCALL 26 38 15 44 / 100 20 0 0  
MOUNTAIN HOME 31 50 26 54 / 80 0 0 0  
ONTARIO 32 52 27 52 / 90 0 0 0  
ROME 27 48 21 56 / 80 0 0 0  
TWIN FALLS 31 42 26 49 / 100 0 0 0  
 

 
   
BOI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
ID...NONE.  
OR...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
WWW.WEATHER.GOV/BOISE  
 
INTERACT WITH US VIA SOCIAL MEDIA:  
WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/NWSBOISE  
WWW.X.COM/NWSBOISE  
 
DISCUSSION...JDS  
AVIATION.....SH  
SHORT TERM...DG  
LONG TERM....JM  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab ID Page
The Nexlab OR Page Main Text Page