848  
FXUS65 KCYS 020806  
AFDCYS  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHEYENNE WY  
206 AM MDT SAT AUG 2 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2 OF 5) FOR SEVERE WEATHER  
SATURDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING EAST OF THE LARAMIE RANGE. ALL  
MODES OF SEVERE WEATHER ARE POSSIBLE: LARGE HAIL, DAMAGING  
WINDS, AN ISOLATED TORNADO OR TWO (SOUTHERN PANHANDLE), AND  
FLASH FLOODING.  
 
- THERE IS A MARGINAL TO SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE WEATHER FOR  
SUNDAY, MAINLY ACROSS WESTERN NEBRASKA. PRIMARY HAZARDS LOOK  
TO BE LARGE HAIL, DAMAGING WINDS, AND FLASH FLOODING.  
 
- DRIER AND WARMER CONDITIONS RETURN MID-WEEK AND CONTINUE  
THROUGH THE WEEKEND.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/  
 
ISSUED AT 205 AM MDT SAT AUG 2 2025  
 
MOSTLY QUIET TONIGHT AFTER ANOTHER ROUND OF SEVERE WEATHER PUSHED  
THROUGH THE CWA THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. SKIES ARE CLEARING  
NICELY, THOUGH SOME LOW CLOUDS HAVE BEGUN TO MOVE OVER CHEYENNE AND  
PORTIONS OF THE SOUTH LARAMIE RANGE. THESE CLOUDS WILL LIKELY STICK  
AROUND THROUGH THE MORNING HOURS AND MAY SPREAD EASTWARD INTO  
PORTIONS OF THE NEBRASKA PANHANDLE. TEMPERATURES ARE COOLER TONIGHT,  
IN THE LOW-50S TO LOW-60S OVER IN THE PANHANDLE. WINDS A LIGHT IN  
MOST LOCATIONS, EXCEPT BORDEAUX WHICH IS GUSTING AROUND 40MPH DUE TO  
WEAK, 700MB DISTURBANCE.  
 
YET ANOTHER ROUND OF SEVERE WEATHER IS POSSIBLE THIS AFTERNOON  
ACROSS MUCH OF WESTERN NEBRASKA AND INTO SOUTHEAST WYOMING, WHERE  
THE STORM PREDICTION CENTER HAS HIGHLIGHTED A SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2  
OF 5) FOR THE SOUTHERN PANHANDLE AND A MARGINAL RISK (LEVEL 1 OF 5)  
FOR THE REMAINING AREAS EAST OF THE LARAMIE RANGE. A BROADER, UPPER-  
LEVEL TROUGH WILL PUSH INTO THE REGION FROM THE WEST WITH A MOISTURE  
FETCH BACK WEST WELL INTO THE PACIFIC OCEAN. STRONG 500MB CYCLONIC  
VORTICITY ADVECTION WILL ENABLE THE EASTERN BRANCH OF THE UPPER-  
LEVEL TROUGH TO DEEPEN, BECOMING BETTER DEFINED, ESPECIALLY AS THE  
ANTICYCLONIC VORTICITY ADVECTION TO THE WEST ENHANCED THE DEVELOPING  
UPPER-LEVEL RIDGE. AHEAD OF THIS TROUGH, STORMS ARE EXPECTED TO  
INITIATE ALONG AND EAST OF THE LARAMIE RANGE ONCE MORE. 700MB FLOW  
REMAINS RELATIVELY WEAK, THOUGH A HINT OF A LOW-LEVEL JET DEVELOPING  
IN THE EARLY AFTERNOON ACROSS THE WESTERN REGIONS MAY LEAD TO  
STRENGTHENING OF THE OVERALL ENVIRONMENTAL POTENTIAL AS THAT SUBTLE  
JET MOVE EASTWARD THROUGHOUT THE EVENING HOURS. A WEAK, 700MB COLD  
FRONT WILL PUSH IN FROM THE NORTH DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING  
HOURS WITH 700MB TEMPERATURES DROPPING FROM AROUND 12 TO 13C DOWN TO  
9 TO 10C THIS EVENING. AT THE SURFACE, WINDS WILL REMAIN MOSTLY  
SOUTHERLY THROUGHOUT THE NIGHT BEFORE TURNING WESTERLY AROUND 12Z  
FOR LOCATIONS JUST EAST OF THE LARAMIE RANGE. THIS WILL RESULT IN  
THE TERRAIN-INDUCED DRYLINE TO PROPAGATE EASTWARD THROUGHOUT THE  
LATE MORNING AND EARLY AFTERNOON HOURS, WHICH IS HELPING PUSH MUCH  
OF THE BEST SEVERE THREAT INTO THE PANHANDLE. HOWEVER, A BRIEF  
PERIOD OF EASTERLY FLOW MAY EXIST LATER THIS AFTERNOON, PRIOR TO THE  
DRYLINE MOVING EASTWARD, THAT WILL HELP STORMS INITIATE ALONG THE  
LARAMIE RANGE. THIS MAY ALSO LEAD TO A COUPLE ROUNDS OF SHOWERS AND  
STORMS TODAY, WITH THE EARLY EASTERLY FLOW INITIATING STORMS ALONG  
THE LARAMIE RANGE, THEN THE DRYLINE INITIATING STORMS AS IT MOVES  
EAST OFF OF THE LARAMIE RANGE THROUGHOUT THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING  
HOURS. THEREFORE, A LONGER DURATION OF SHOWERS AND STORMS MAY BE  
POSSIBLE THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. TEMPERATURES WILL WARM INTO THE  
LOW-80S TO LOW-90S ACROSS THE PANHANDLE, PROVIDING AMPLE ATMOSPHERIC  
DESTABILIZATION FOR STORM INITIATION LATER THIS AFTERNOON.  
 
AS FAR AS SEVERE PARAMETERS GOES FOR THIS AFTERNOON, MLCAPE VALUES  
WILL INCREASE INTO THE 1800 TO 2200J RANGE. THE NAM SUGGESTS THE  
HIGHEST CAPE VALUES, BUT ALSO HAS A BIT OF A MOISTURE BIAS WITHIN  
THE MODEL, LIKELY ARTIFICIALLY INCREASING FORECAST CAPE VALUES.  
HOWEVER, THE HRRR IS A BIT DRY RESULTING IN LOWER CAPE VALUES THE  
AFTERNOON, FURTHER INCREASING MODEL DISAGREEMENT. 0-6KM BULK SHEAR  
VALUES ARE DECENT FOR THE AFTERNOON, SITTING AROUND 40 TO 45 KTS AT  
THIS TIME, PER THE HRRR WITH SLIGHTLY LOWER VALUES (35 TO 40 KTS) IN  
THE NAM AND RAP. SOME PREFERENCE GOES TOWARDS THE HRRR SOLUTION  
TODAY AS THE HRRR PERFORMED WELL WITH YESTERDAY'S CONVECTION.  
FORECAST SOUNDINGS FROM THE NAM AND HRRR SUGGEST DRIER LOW-LEVEL,  
BUT AMPLE CAPE IN THE HAIL GROWTH REGION ACROSS THE PANHANDLE. DCAPE  
VALUES IN THE 1200 TO 1500J RANGE ALSO INDICATE THE POTENTIAL FOR  
STRONG TO DAMAGING WINDS GUSTS ACROSS MUCH OF THE PANHANDLE THIS  
AFTERNOON. 0-1KM STORM RELATIVE HELICITY ON THE OTHER HAND SITS ONLY  
AROUND 25, DEPENDING WHICH MODEL IS BEING INTERROGATED, WITH 0 TO  
3KM ONLY AROUND 30 OR SO. THESE VALUES ARE A LITTLE LOW FOR TORNADIC  
POTENTIAL, BUT AN ISOLATED TORNADO CANNOT BE COMPLETELY RULED OUT  
TODAY WITH SOME TURNING EVIDENT IN THE LOWEST-LEVELS. HODOGRAPHS ARE  
FAIRLY STRAIGHT, NOT MATTER WHICH MODEL IS CONSIDERED, LEADING TO AN  
INCREASED CHANCE OF STORM SPLITTING AND UPSCALE GROWTH ACROSS THE  
REGION. WITH BULK SHEAR VECTORS ORIENTED MORE PERPENDICULAR TO THE  
DRYLINE AND INCOMING COOL FRONT, INITIALLY DISCRETE STORMS ARE  
POSSIBLE. HOWEVER, WEAK STEERING FLOW FAVORS STORMS THEN GROWING  
UPSCALE THROUGHOUT THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING HOURS INTO A MORE  
LINEAR SYSTEM. IN ADDITION TO THE SEVERE THREAT, THE WEATHER  
PREDICTION CENTER HAS HIGHLIGHT MUCH OF THE REGION IN A MARGINAL  
RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL, WITH A SMALL SLIVER OF THE SOUTHERN  
PANHANDLE UNDER A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL. WITH  
PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES INCREASING TOWARDS THE 1 INCH MARK ACROSS  
THE PANHANDLE AND FAIRLY WEAK STEERING FLOW, HEAVY RAIN AND FLASH  
FLOODING WILL ALSO POSE A RISK TODAY. THEREFORE, ALL MODES OF SEVERE  
WEATHER ARE POSSIBLE THIS AFTERNOON: LARGE HAIL, DAMAGING WINDS, AN  
ISOLATED TORNADO OR TWO, AND FLASH FLOODING FROM HEAVY RAINFALL AND  
SLOW MOVING STORMS GROWING UPSCALE. DESPITE THIS, WESTERN PORTIONS  
OF THE REGION, GENERALLY WEST OF THE LARAMIE RANGE, WILL SEE  
ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS THIS AFTERNOON WITH LITTLE TO NO  
PRECIPITATION CHANCES AND LITTLE TO NO WETTING RAINFALL CHANCES.  
 
THE STORM PREDICTION CENTER HAS INDICATED A MARGINAL RISK (LEVEL 1  
OF 5) FOR SEVERE WEATHER ON SUNDAY AS NORTHWESTERLY FLOW MOVES  
OVERHEAD. SIMILARLY, FAR EASTERN REGIONS OF THE CWA HAVE A MARGINAL  
RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ON SUNDAY AS WELL. AS THE UPPER-LEVEL  
RIDGE DEVELOPS OVER THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST, NORTHWESTERLY FLOW WILL  
DEVELOP OVERHEAD, OPENING THE DOOR FOR SUBTLE DISTURBANCES TO PASS  
THROUGH THE FLOW. A VERY SUBTLE UPPER-LEVEL SHORTWAVE WILL BE THE  
PRIMARY SYNOPTIC FORCING FOR SEVERE WEATHER POTENTIAL SUNDAY AS IT  
MOVES THROUGH THE UPPER-LEVEL RIDGE INTO THE SOUTHERN PLAINS. AMPLE  
500MB CVA WILL PRECEDE THIS SHORTWAVE, LEADING TO ADDITIONAL, THOUGH  
WEAKER, SYNOPTIC LIFT ASSOCIATED WITH THESE VORTICITY MAXIMA. 700MB  
LOW ONCE AGAIN REMAINS WEAK, BUT SOME MODELS SUGGEST THE DEVELOPMENT  
OF A 700MB LOW OVER EASTERN NEBRASKA, WHICH WOULD ACT TO STRENGTHEN  
WINDS ACROSS THE CWA AND A VERY WEAK 700MB COLD FRONT TO PUSH  
THROUGH, SO WEAK THAT TEMPERATURES WILL LIKELY NOT REACT MUCH TO THE  
FRONTAL PASSAGE. HOWEVER, THIS WILL STILL BE ENOUGH TO GET SHOWERS  
AND STORMS GOING AGAIN SUNDAY AFTERNOON. BULK SHEAR WILL BE STRONGER  
ON SUNDAY WITH VALUES AROUND 50 TO 55KTS ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE  
REGION, LIKELY AS A RESULT OF THE DEVELOPING 700MB LOW OVER  
NEBRASKA. MLCAPE VALUES WILL RETURN TO THE 1500 TO 1800J RANGE  
SUNDAY AFTERNOON WITH PWS INCREASING TOWARDS THE 1 INCH MARK ONCE  
MORE. FORECAST SOUNDINGS SUGGESTING FAIRLY DRY LOW-LEVEL AND MORE  
MOIST MID-LEVELS THAN PREVIOUS DAYS. DCAPE VALUES AROUND 1000J WILL  
BE PRESENT WITH THE DRIER LOW-LEVELS AND WITH DECENT CAPE IN THE  
HAIL GROWTH LAYER, LARGE HAIL AND DAMAGING WINDS WILL BE POSSIBLE  
ONCE AGAIN. HOWEVER, FORECAST HRRR SOUNDINGS SUGGEST MUCH LESS CAPE  
AND DCAPE, INCREASING THE LIKELIHOOD OF SMALLER HAIL THAN THE NAM AND  
RAP. LOW-LEVEL TURNING IS NEARLY NON-EXISTANT, SO TORNADOES ARE NOT  
EXPECTED AT THIS TIME FOR SUNDAY. SHORT RANGE MODELS SHOULD BEGIN TO  
COME INTO BETTER AGREEMENT LATER TODAY INTO THE OVERNIGHT HOURS, SO  
FORECAST UPDATES WILL BE IMPLEMENTED AS A CLEARER PICTURE IS PAINTED  
FOR SUNDAY. DESPITE THE SEVERE RISK TO THE EAST, FIRE WEATHER  
CONCERNS WILL ONCE AGAIN BE PRESENT WEST OF THE LARAMIE RANGE,  
THOUGH WINDS SHOULD BE BELOW CRITERIA.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 205 AM MDT SAT AUG 2 2025  
 
WARMER AND DRIER WEATHER IS STILL EXPECTED IN THE LONG TERM FORECAST  
FOR MONDAY ONWARDS. HOWEVER, THERE IS CURRENTLY A MARGINAL RISK FOR  
SEVERE WEATHER ACROSS EASTERN PORTIONS OF THE REGION ON MONDAY, DUE  
TO NORTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT ALLOWING A WEAK DISTURBANCE TO PUSH  
THROUGH THE FLOW AND INITIATE ENOUGH SYNOPTIC LIFT TO SUPPORT A FEW  
SHOWERS AND STORM, ESPECIALLY AS MONSOONAL MOISTURE ATTEMPTS TO  
RETURN THE REGION. STORM CHANCES ARE EXPECTED TO DROP OFF TUESDAY AS  
AN UPPER-LEVEL RIDGE BUILDS OVER THE SOUTHWESTERN CONUS AND  
SUBSIDENCE RETURNS TO SOUTHEAST WYOMING AND WESTERN NEBRASKA. THIS  
HIGH IS EXPECTED TO REMAIN FIRMLY IN PLACE, LEADING TO MORE ZONAL  
FLOW ACROSS THE REGION THROUGHOUT THE WEEK. WITH THE RIDGE SO CLOSE  
BY, ITS INFLUENCE WILL BE FELT AS TEMPERATURES ONCE AGAIN RISE INTO  
THE 90S TO NEAR 100S. THE WARMEST DAY LOOKS TO BE THURSDAY AT THIS  
TIME, THOUGH WEDNESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY WILL BE QUITE HOT. THE NEXT  
BEST CHANCE FOR PRECIPITATION WILL BE SATURDAY AS AN UPPER-LEVEL  
TROUGH ATTEMPTS TO DIVE SOUTH OUT OF CANADA. HOWEVER, THIS IS STILL  
A WEEK AWAY, SO THINGS WILL CHANGE. THIS POTENTIAL TROUGH WILL  
CONTINUE TO BE MONITORED THROUGHOUT FUTURE FORECAST UPDATES.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SUNDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1104 PM MDT FRI AUG 1 2025  
 
CLEARING SKIES EXPECTED OVER THE NEXT 1 TO 2 HOURS ACROSS  
WESTERN NEBRASKA, WITH MOSTLY LIGHT WINDS NEAR THE SURFACE.  
LIGHT AND VARIABLE WINDS EXPECTED ACROSS SOUTHEAST WYOMING.  
THERE IS ANOTHER CHANCE FOR PATCHY FOG DEVELOPING ALONG AND EAST  
OF THE LARAMIE RANGE, BUT CONFIDENCE IS LOW AT THIS TIME.  
ADDITIONALLY, LOW CEILINGS WILL BE POSSIBLE OVERNIGHT, WITH  
SURFACE WINDS NOT FAVORABLE FOR FOG DEVELOPMENT.  
 
 
   
CYS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
WY...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...AM  
LONG TERM...AM  
AVIATION...AM  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab WY Page
The Nexlab NE Page
Main Text Page