888  
FXUS65 KBOI 241705  
AFDBOI  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BOISE ID  
1005 AM MST WED DEC 24 2025  
   
DISCUSSION  
VERY WINDY CONDITIONS HAVE DEVELOPED ACROSS  
SOUTHEASTERN OREGON AND THE SOUTHERN IDAHO HIGHLANDS NEAR THE  
NEVADA BORDER. SOUTHERLY WINDS ARE GUSTING TO AROUND 45 MPH WITH  
A FEW STATIONS REPORTING GUSTS AS HIGH AS 55. A WIND ADVISORY  
CONTINUES IN THOSE AREAS. MEANWHILE...IN THE SNAKE RIVER PLAIN  
AND ALONG THE I-84 CORRIDOR, GUSTY SOUTHEAST WINDS ARE BLOWING.  
WE BELIEVE THAT IN MOST AREAS WINDS ALONG THE I-84 CORRIDOR  
WILL STAY JUST BELOW ADVISORY CRITERIA, THOUGH A FEW GUSTS AS  
HIGH AS 40 ARE POSSIBLE. THE SOUTHEASTERLY WINDS ARE ALSO  
DOWNSLOPING AND DRIVING UP TEMPERATURES TO RECORD HIGHS REACHING  
THE UPPER 50S AND LOW 60S IN MANY VALLEY LOCATIONS.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
AREAS OF LLWS CONTINUING THIS MORNING,  
TAPERING OFF BY WED/18Z. PRECIPITATION EXPANDING THROUGHOUT E-OREGON  
AND SW-IDAHO, CONTINUING THROUGH THE EVENING. VFR/MVFR IN RAIN  
SHOWERS, MVFR/IFR IN MOUNTAIN SNOW, MTNS OBSCURED. SNOW LEVELS: 6-  
8KFT MSL. SURFACE WINDS: S-E 15-25 KT WITH GUSTS TO 25-45 KT.  
LOCALIZED GUSTS TO 55 KT NEAR THE NV BORDER AND E-CNTRL OREGON.  
WINDS ALOFT AT 10 KFT MSL: S-SW 45-60 KT.  
 
KBOI...LIGHT RAIN THIS AFTERNOON/EVENING, ALTHOUGH SE WINDS WILL  
LIMIT AMOUNT AND INTENSITY. EXPECTING VFR CONDITIONS THROUGHOUT THE  
PERIOD. SURFACE WINDS: SE 15-22 KT WITH GUSTS UP TO 35 KT. SE WINDS  
DECREASING TO 7-13 KT OVERNIGHT.  
 
 
   
PREV DISCUSSION  
 
SHORT TERM...TODAY THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT...MILD TEMPERATURES  
AND UNSETTLED CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST THROUGH THE CHRISTMAS  
HOLIDAY AS A STRONG PACIFIC SYSTEM MOVES THROUGH THE REGION. A  
COLD FRONT WILL MOVE ACROSS THE AREA THIS MORNING, CROSSING  
SOUTHEAST OREGON FROM NOW THROUGH SUNRISE AND SOUTHWEST IDAHO  
LATER THIS MORNING. WIND SPEEDS OF 25 TO 35 MPH WITH GUSTS UP TO  
55 MPH ARE LIKELY, PARTICULARLY ACROSS MUCH OF SOUTHEAST  
OREGON, THE WESTERN MAGIC VALLEY, AND THE HIGHLANDS NEAR THE  
NEVADA BORDER WITH AND BEHIND THE FRONTAL PASSAGE. A WIND  
ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FOR THESE AREAS THROUGH WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON.  
 
PRECIPITATION WILL ACCOMPANY THE FRONTAL PASSAGE, WITH THE  
HEAVIEST AMOUNTS EXPECTED ALONG THE FRONT ITSELF. WHILE  
SUBTROPICAL MOISTURE IS BEING PULLED INTO THE SYSTEM, STRONG  
WESTERLY FLOW ALOFT WILL LIKELY CREATE A RAIN SHADOWING EFFECT  
FOR THE TREASURE VALLEY, LIMITING TOTALS THERE TO AROUND 0.10  
INCHES. IN CONTRAST, THE MOUNTAINS OF CENTRAL IDAHO AND  
NORTHEAST OREGON COULD SEE 0.25 TO 0.50 INCHES OF LIQUID  
EQUIVALENT. SNOW LEVELS WILL REMAIN HIGH AHEAD OF THE FRONT,  
GENERALLY BETWEEN 7000 AND 8000 FEET, MEANING RAIN WILL BE THE  
PRIMARY PRECIPITATION TYPE FOR MOST INHABITED AREAS. BEHIND THE  
FRONT, SNOW LEVELS WILL DROP TO BETWEEN 3500 AND 5500 FEET BY  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT, ALLOWING FOR LIGHT SNOW ACCUMULATIONS IN THE  
MOUNTAINS AND HIGHER FOOTHILLS.  
 
FOR CHRISTMAS DAY, A WEAK RIDGE WILL PROVIDE A BRIEF RESPITE  
FOR THE LOWER VALLEYS EARLY, THOUGH A 70 PERCENT CHANCE OF RAIN  
AND HIGH ELEVATION SNOW WILL CONTINUE FOR THE CENTRAL IDAHO  
MOUNTAINS. HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN 10 TO 15 DEGREES ABOVE  
SEASONAL NORMALS, WITH VALLEY HIGHS REACHING NEAR RECORD HIGHS  
FOR SEVERAL LOCATIONS IN THE UPPER 50S. THE RECORD HIGH FOR  
CHRISTMAS DAY IN BOISE IS 60 DEGREES WHICH WAS SET IN 1885.  
 
ANOTHER MOIST SYSTEM AND ASSOCIATED ATMOSPHERIC RIVER WILL REACH  
THE AREA THURSDAY AFTERNOON. THIS WILL BRING ANOTHER ROUND OF  
WIDESPREAD PRECIPITATION TO THE AREA WITH A SLIGHT CHANCE OF  
THUNDERSTORMS FOR THE CENTRAL IDAHO MOUNTAINS. PRECIPITATION  
WILL CONTINUE OVERNIGHT INTO FRIDAY. SNOW LEVELS WILL INITIALLY  
START AROUND 5500 TO 7000 FEET BEFORE LOWERING AGAIN FRIDAY  
NIGHT. SIGNIFICANT SNOW ACCUMULATIONS ARE POSSIBLE FOR THE  
HIGHER TERRAIN, WITH 2 TO 4 INCHES POSSIBLE FOR THE MOUNTAIN  
VALLEYS.  
 
LONG TERM...SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY...AS THE UPPER TROUGH MOVES  
EAST, LINGERING PRECIPITATION IN THE MOUNTAINS IS EXPECTED SATURDAY  
MORNING AND AFTERNOON. PRECIP THAT FALLS IS LIKELY TO BE SNOW WITH  
SNOW LEVELS NEAR VALLEY FLOORS, WITH MINIMAL ACCUMULATIONS IN  
DWINDLING MOISTURE CONTENT. PRECIPITATION TAPERS OFF COMPLETELY BY  
SATURDAY EVENING. AS THE LOW MOVES EAST, THE TROUGH AMPLIFIES AND  
BECOMES A RETROGRADING CUT OFF LOW OVER THE CALIFORNIA COAST. THIS  
WILL CONVERSELY CAUSE HIGH PRESSURE TO BUILD NORTH OF THE LOW, OVER  
OUR AREA, CAUSING A REX BLOCK IN A TEXTBOOK EXAMPLE OF ANTICYCLONIC  
WAVE BREAKING. THIS SYNOPTIC PATTERNS MEANS SUNDAY THROUGH THE REST  
OF THE LONG TERM WILL BE DRY AND STABLE. STRONG SUBSIDENCE AND  
RECENT RAINS WILL SUPPORT THE DEVELOPMENT OF INVERSIONS IN MOST  
VALLEYS, CREATING STAGNANT AIR AND LIKELY PERSISTENT FOG AND LOW  
STRATUS. TEMPERATURES DURING THIS TIME FRAME ARE UNCERTAIN GIVEN  
POOR MODEL RESOLUTION OF THE INVERSION, THOUGH CLIMATOLOGY SUGGESTS  
AIR IN THE INVERSION WILL BECOME MUCH COLDER THAN THE AIR ABOVE IT,  
ESPECIALLY IF STRATUS STICK AROUND. THIS COULD MEAN FORECAST MORNING  
LOWS ARE FEW DEGREES TOO COLD, WHILE AFTERNOON HIGHS COULD BE 5-10  
DEGREES TOO WARM.  
 
 
   
BOI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
ID...WIND ADVISORY UNTIL 4 PM MST THIS AFTERNOON IDZ015-029-030.  
OR...WIND ADVISORY UNTIL 4 PM MST /3 PM PST/ THIS AFTERNOON  
ORZ061>063.  
 
 
 
 
 
WWW.WEATHER.GOV/BOISE  
 
INTERACT WITH US VIA SOCIAL MEDIA:  
WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/NWSBOISE  
WWW.X.COM/NWSBOISE  
 
DISCUSSION...JB  
AVIATION.....NF  
SHORT TERM...JDS  
LONG TERM....JM  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab ID Page
The Nexlab OR Page
Main Text Page