473  
FXUS65 KBOI 080350  
AFDBOI  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BOISE ID  
850 PM MST SUN DEC 7 2025  
   
DISCUSSION  
RADAR PCPN ECHOES HAVE GENERALLY ENDED IN OUR CWA  
THIS EVENING AND NO FURTHER PCPN IS EXPECTED OVERNIGHT AND MOST  
OF MONDAY. A WELL-DEFINED ATMOSPHERIC RIVER ALONG 40-45N IN THE  
PACIFIC WAS NEARING THE WA COAST THIS EVENING, AND MODELS AIM  
IT ACROSS THE NORTHERN ZONES OF OUR CWA MONDAY EVENING. THIS  
WILL BEGIN A LENGTHY PERIOD OF MODERATE TO HEAVY RAIN (SNOW  
LEVEL 7000-8000 FEET) IN OUR NORTHERN ZONES MONDAY NIGHT  
THROUGH WEDNESDAY, WITH THE ATMOSPHERIC RIVER SHIFTING SLOWLY  
NORTHWARD AS A WARM FRONT. WEDNESDAY WILL BECOME UNSEASONABLY  
WARM (AND DRYING BY THURSDAY) AND WILL STAY WARM AND DRY  
THROUGH SATURDAY. SATURDAY MAY BE SO WARM ALOFT THAT AN  
INVERSION WILL FORM IN THE VALLEYS BELOW, BUT WITH LITTLE IF  
ANY SNOW ON THE GROUND THE INVERSION SHOULD BE WEAK. A COOLER  
UPPER TROUGH IS FINALLY FORECAST INLAND FROM THE NORTH PACIFIC  
NEXT SUNDAY. NO SIGN OF WINTER WEATHER THROUGH AT LEAST DEC 14.  
NO UPDATES.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
GENERALLY VFR, EXCEPT LOW STRATUS/FOG IN MOUNTAINS  
CREATING MTN OBSCURATION. PATCHY VALLEY FOG MONDAY AM. PRECIP  
INCREASING FROM THE NORTHWEST MONDAY PM, HEAVIEST NORTH OF SNAKE  
PLAIN. PERIODS OF MVFR-LIFR IN MODERATE/HEAVY RAIN, OR IN SNOW.  
SNOW LEVELS MONDAY PM: 7K-8K FEET MSL IN E OREGON, 6K-7K FEET  
IN SW IDAHO. SURFACE WINDS: SW-SE 5-15 KT, MONDAY PM GUSTS TO  
20-30 KT IN E OREGON AND MTNS OF SW IDAHO. POCKETS OF LLWS  
TONIGHT, INCLUDING KEUL-KBOI. WINDS ALOFT AT 10KFT MSL:  
NW 25-40 KT.  
 
KBOI...GENERALLY VFR, BUT UP TO 10% CHANCE OF LOW CEILINGS/MIST  
DEVELOPING EARLY MONDAY AM. LOW LEVEL WIND SHEAR TONIGHT,  
DECREASING AFTER MON/09Z. RAIN RETURNS AFTER TUE/00Z. SURFACE  
WINDS: SE 4-10 KT.  
 
 
   
PREV DISCUSSION  
 
SHORT TERM...TONIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT...A WEAK WARM FRONT  
HAS BROUGHT LIGHT PRECIPITATION TO THE AREA TODAY. PRECIPITATION  
SHOULD TAPER OFF LATER THIS AFTERNOON WITH MILD TEMPERATURES  
CONTINUING. A LULL IN PRECIPITATION IS EXPECTED ON MONDAY BEFORE  
ANOTHER WARM FRONT MOVES THROUGH. THE NEXT WARM FRONT ARRIVES  
ON MONDAY EVENING, WITH WIDESPREAD PRECIPITATION NORTH OF A  
LINE FROM BURNS OR TO JEROME ID THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT. WARM AND  
MOIST ZONAL FLOW CONTINUES OVER THE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS AS A  
SIGNIFICANT ATMOSPHERIC RIVER IMPACTS THE PACIFIC NW ACROSS WA,  
NORTHERN ID AND WESTERN MT. THE CENTRAL ID MOUNTAINS WILL SEE  
SIGNIFICANT PRECIPITATION, BUT FAR LESS AMOUNTS COMPARED TO  
NORTHERN ID. SNOW WILL BE CONFINED TO THE HIGHEST PEAKS ABOVE  
7000-8000 FEET.  
 
LONG TERM...WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...LOW PRESSURE ALOFT IN  
THE GULF OF ALASKA AND HIGH PRESSURE OFF THE COAST OF  
CALIFORNIA ARE CREATING A STRONG PRESSURE GRADIENT, PULLING A  
SIGNIFICANTLY WARM AND MOIST AIRMASS THROUGH THE AREA WEDNESDAY  
THROUGH THURSDAY. MID-LEVEL FLOW REMAINS AT 50-70 KT WITH PWS  
NEAR RECORDS FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. WINDS IN RIDGES, OPEN AREAS,  
AND HIGHLANDS GUST UP TO 45 MPH AT THE SURFACE. THESE WINDS,  
OROGRAPHY, AND THE MOISTURE WILL BRING AN EXTENDED PERIOD OF  
PRECIPITATION CHANCES GREATER THAN 70% IN HIGHER TERRAIN.  
RAINFALL/LIQUID EQUIVALENT WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY IS AN  
EXTRA 0.5-1.5 INCHES IN HIGHER TERRAIN AND UP TO 0.1 INCHES  
IN LOWER ELEVATIONS ON TOP OF WHAT FELL IN THE SHORT TERM.  
THE STRONG FLOW AND WARM AIRMASS BRING SNOW LEVELS UP TO A  
STAGGERING 7-9 KFT MSL BOTH OF THESE DAYS, SO WHILE THE  
HIGHEST PEAKS WILL SEE HALF A FOOT TO A FOOT OF SNOW,  
MOUNTAINS BELOW ABOUT 8KFT MSL WILL SEE PREDOMINANTLY RAIN.  
THE PROLONGED RAINFALL ON A BARELY DEVELOPED SNOWPACK WOULD  
PRODUCE RUNOFF AND HAVE LONG-LIVED IMPACTS ON THE SNOWPACK  
GOING INTO THE WINTER.  
 
THE STRONG FLOW ALOFT TAPERS OFF INTO FRIDAY AS THE MOISTURE  
PLUME GOES NORTH OF THE PACIFIC HIGH AS IT MOVES INLAND. THE  
WEATHER WILL GENERALLY DRY OUT AND WINDS WILL DIE DOWN AS THE  
RIDGE BUILDS OVERHEAD. THE RIDGING WILL MAKE VALLEY INVERSIONS  
POSSIBLE AND THUS FOG AND LOW STRATUS WITH SATURATED SOILS. WITH  
THE WARMER AIRMASS, TEMPERATURES ABOVE ANY INVERSION WILL BE  
15-20 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL THROUGHOUT THE LONG-TERM PERIOD.  
THE POSSIBILITY OF INVERTED CONDITIONS INTRODUCES UNCERTAINTY  
IN VALLEY TEMPERATURES LATE IN THE WEEK AS COLDER AIR COULD  
GET TRAPPED NEAR THE SURFACE. MODELS BEGIN TO DIVERGE BY THE  
END OF SUNDAY, WITH SOME HINTS AT A RETURN TO COLDER TEMPS  
AND MORE PRECIP IN THE EXTENDED FORECAST.  
 
 
   
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...LC  
AVIATION.....SH  
SHORT TERM...KA  
LONG TERM....JM/LC  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab ID Page
The Nexlab OR Page
Main Text Page