138  
FXUS65 KCYS 131733  
AFDCYS  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHEYENNE WY  
1133 AM MDT MON OCT 13 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- FROST ADVISORIES ARE IN EFFECT UNTIL 9AM FOR MUCH OF THE HIGH  
PLAINS.  
 
- GUSTY SOUTHERLY WINDS ARE EXPECTED TODAY ALONG WITH A RETURN  
OF SCATTERED SHOWERS DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING.  
 
- AREAS OF LOCALLY DENSE FOG ARE POSSIBLE NEAR THE I-80 SUMMIT  
AND OVER THE HIGH PLAINS BOTH TONIGHT INTO TUESDAY MORNING AND  
TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY MORNING.  
 
- THE NEXT STORM SYSTEM WILL SLOWLY MOVE THROUGH THE AREA LATE  
WEDNESDAY THROUGH EARLY FRIDAY, BRINGING FIRST SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS, FOLLOWING BY A CHANCE FOR MOUNTAIN SNOW AND  
STRONG WINDS.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/
 
 
ISSUED AT 400 AM MDT MON OCT 13 2025  
 
SKIES ARE MOSTLY CLEAR OVER THE AREA THIS MORNING, WITH THE  
EXCEPTION OF A LITTLE BIT MORE CLOUD COVER THAN ORIGINALLY FORECAST  
OVER FAR SOUTHEAST WYOMING AND THE SOUTHERN NEBRASKA PANHANDLE. THIS  
IS ASSOCIATED WITH A WEAK VORT-MAX TRAVERSING THROUGH THIS MORNING.  
TEMPERATURES ARE RUNNING A LITTLE WARMER UNDER THIS CLOUD DECK,  
WHICH MAY PREVENT FROST FORMATION HERE DEPENDING ON HOW LONG IT CAN  
LINGER OVER THE AREA. THIS SHOULD CLEAR OUT IN THE NEXT 2-3 HOURS,  
SO THERE STILL COULD BE A SHORT WINDOW BEFORE SUNRISE TO DEVELOP  
SOME FROST. ELSEWHERE, CHILLY TEMPERATURES ARE ON TRACK WITH  
WIDESPREAD LOWER 30S ACROSS THE HIGH PLAINS. THE CLOUDS SHOULD BE  
GONE BY SUNRISE, SO FROST SHOULD BURN OFF QUICKLY AS TEMPERATURES  
WARM.  
 
TODAY WILL BE A SOMEWHAT UNUSUAL METEOROLOGICAL SETUP. A SURFACE  
HIGH IS CURRENTLY EXTENDING INTO OUR AREA, BUT IS EXPECTED TO BEGIN  
SHIFTING OFF TO THE EAST SHORTLY. WE'LL HAVE A STRONG REVERSE  
PRESSURE GRADIENT OVER THE AREA, LEADING TO FAIRLY STRONG SOUTHERLY  
TO SOUTHEASTERLY WINDS. THIS IS NOT TOO ATYPICAL IN THE LARAMIE  
VALLEY, WHICH CAN EXPECT THE STRONGEST WINDS, POSSIBLY SEEING A FEW  
GUSTS TO NEAR 50 MPH, BUT A LITTLE LESS COMMON TO SEE SOUTHERLIES  
THIS STRONG FURTHER EAST. WIDESPREAD GUSTS BETWEEN 30 AND 45 MPH ARE  
EXPECTED FOR THE ENTIRE DAY, AND THESE MAY WEAKEN SLIGHTLY AFTER  
DARK BUT ARE NOT EXPECTED TO DROP OFF. ADDING TO TODAY'S ODDITIES  
WILL BE A RETURN OF THE PSEUDO-MONSOONAL PATTERN THAT DOMINATED THE  
ROCKY MOUNTAIN REGION LAST FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. THIS WILL BE CAUSED  
BY A POWERFUL UPPER LEVEL CLOSED LOW CURRENTLY DIVING SOUTHWARD  
ALONG THE WEST COAST. AS THIS DIGS IN, THE RIDGE OVER TEXAS WILL  
ALSO AMPLIFY, TURNING THE FLOW ALOFT BACK TO SOUTHERLY AT 700-MB AND  
SOUTHWESTERLY ALOFT. DEEP MOISTURE WILL BE PULLED NORTHWARD ONCE  
AGAIN ALONG WITH A FEW VORT-MAXES MEANDERING OVER NEW MEXICO AND  
ARIZONA THIS MORNING. PRECIPITABLE WATER WILL INCREASE RAPIDLY TODAY  
WITH CLOUD COVER COMING IN QUICKLY AROUND MIDDAY. MESOSCALE MODEL  
GUIDANCE SHOWS FAIRLY POTENT POSITIVE THETA-E ADVECTION OVER THE  
AREA BETWEEN NOON AND ABOUT 9PM AS THE FIRST VORT-MAX MOVES THROUGH.  
THIS SHOULD PROVIDE SUFFICIENT FORCING TO KICK OFF SCATTERED SHOWERS  
OVER THE AREA. POPS WERE INCREASED QUITE A BIT WITH THIS UPDATE TO  
ACCOUNT FOR DECENT SHOWER COVERAGE THIS AFTERNOON AND EARLY EVENING.  
FORECAST SOUNDINGS SHOW LITTLE TO NO INSTABILITY, SO THUNDER IS NOT  
LIKELY BUT A FEW RUMBLES CAN'T BE RULED OUT. THE BEST CHANCE FOR  
THUNDER WILL BE IN CARBON COUNTY.  
 
WHILE THE FORCING ASSOCIATED WITH THE FIRST-VORT MAX DRIES UP AROUND  
9PM, A SECOND REGION OF INCREASED MOISTURE AND MODEST OVERRUNNING  
ALOFT WILL MOVE INTO CARBON COUNTY, WHICH MAY NOT SEE MUCH OF A  
BREAK FROM THE SCATTERED SHOWER ACTIVITY. EXPECT SHOWER COVERAGE TO  
EXPAND ONCE AGAIN OVERNIGHT THROUGH ABOUT MIDDAY TUESDAY BEFORE  
MOISTURE ALOFT AND FORCING FOR ASCENT DISSIPATE DURING THE AFTERNOON  
AND EVENING HOURS. MEANWHILE, THE PERSISTENT SOUTHEAST FLOW OVER THE  
HIGH PLAINS WILL RETURN DEWPOINTS TO EXCEPTIONALLY HIGH LEVELS FOR  
MID OCTOBER BY THIS EVENING. WE MAY SEE SOME PATCHY FOG DEVELOP NEAR  
THE I-80 SUMMIT AND OVER PORTIONS OF THE HIGH PLAINS OVERNIGHT AND  
TUESDAY MORNING. AS THE MIDDLE/UPPER ATMOSPHERE DRY OUT, WE SHOULD  
SEE FOG COME IN ONCE AGAIN TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY MORNING.  
THERE IS POTENTIAL FOR WEDNESDAY MORNING'S FOG TO BE FAIRLY  
WIDESPREAD.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 400 AM MDT MON OCT 13 2025  
 
WEDNESDAY WILL BE THE WARMEST DAY OF THE WEEK. THE AREA WILL REMAIN  
UNDER SOUTHERLY 700-MB FLOW AND SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT AS THE  
POWERFUL CLOSED LOW ENCROACHES INLAND. THE RIDGE AMPLITUDE ALOFT  
WILL PEAK WEDNESDAY PUSHING 700-MB TEMPERATURES TO THE +9 TO +11C.  
WE PROBABLY WON'T FULLY REALIZE THOSE POTENTIAL TEMPERATURES AT THE  
SURFACE DUE TO CONTINUED SOUTHERLY UPSLOPE-ISH FLOW, CLOUD COVER,  
AND EXTREMELY HIGH BOUNDARY LAYER MOISTURE, BUT WE'LL STILL BE  
LOOKING AT HIGHS GENERALLY 10F ABOVE SEASONAL NORMS. THE CLOSED  
LOW'S JOURNEY OVER THE AREA WILL OCCUR IN TWO PHASES THIS WEEK. THE  
FIRST WILL BE A VORT-MAX EJECTING OUT OF THE PARENT TROUGH WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING, WHILE THE SECOND IS THE PRIMARY TROUGH AXIS  
SLIDING THROUGH THE AREA THURSDAY. THE FIRST PHASE WILL FEATURE A  
DEEPENING LEE CYCLONE OVER NORTH CENTRAL COLORADO EJECTING  
NORTHEASTWARD THROUGH OUR AREA WEDNESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY NIGHT.  
CYCLOGENESIS, VORTICITY ADVECTION ALOFT, AND WEAK INSTABILITY  
PRESENT SHOULD HELP PRODUCE SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS  
DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING HOURS. SHOWER ACTIVITY WILL  
PROBABLY BE FAIRLY DISORGANIZED, BUT CONTINUING MORE OR LESS THROUGH  
THE DAY ON THURSDAY. MODELS ARE FAIRLY CONSISTENT IN SHOWING THE  
PARENT TROUGH AXIS ACCOMPANIED BY STRONG FRONTOGENESIS AS IT SWEEPS  
THROUGH THE AREA SOMETIME BETWEEN THURSDAY MORNING AND THURSDAY  
EVENING. SOUTHERLY FLOW ALOFT WILL ALSO OVERRUN THE SOUTHWEST TO  
NORTHEAST ORIENTED FRONTAL BOUNDARY AND AID IN FORCING FOR ASCENT.  
WE SHOULD SEE COVERAGE OF SHOWERS TICK UP AS THIS PASSES THROUGH.  
MOST OF THE PRECIPITATION WILL PROBABLY FALL ALONG OR JUST AHEAD OF  
THE FRONT RATHER THAN BEHIND. SNOW LEVELS MAY COME DOWN QUICKLY  
ENOUGH TO CAUSE RAIN TO MIX WITH SNOW ALONG AND WEST OF THE LARAMIE  
RANGE, BUT THOSE TO THE EAST WILL PROBABLY REMAIN MOSTLY RAIN.  
 
ONCE THE SPRAWLING UPPER LEVEL LOW EJECTS OUT TO THE EAST, EXPECT TO  
FIND DRIER AIR MOVING IN, DESCENDING MOTION, AND COOLER TEMPERATURES  
OVER THE AREA. THERE IS SOME POTENTIAL FOR ANOTHER ROUND OF STRONG  
WINDS FOR THE WIND PRONE AREAS THURSDAY NIGHT INTO FRIDAY, SIMILAR  
TO THIS LAST EVENT. DETERMINISTIC MODELS SHOW 700-MB WINDS EXCEEDING  
50-KNOTS DURING THIS PERIOD. THIS IS SUPPORTED BY ABOUT 25% OF  
ENSEMBLE MEMBERS TOO, SO THIS IS NOT A LOCK YET, BUT WORTH WATCHING  
IN THE COMING DAYS. ANOTHER SHORTWAVE TROUGH IS LIKELY TO DROP IN  
FROM THE NORTHWEST SOMETIME FRIDAY OR SATURDAY AND GET ABSORBED BY  
THE STRONG DEPARTING UPPER LEVEL LOW. SOME MODELS HAVE THIS  
OCCURRING LATE ENOUGH THAT THE PARENT TROUGH IS ALREADY OUT OF OUR  
AREA, WHILE OTHERS RESULT IN THIS NEW SHORTWAVE REINFORCING THE COOL  
TEMPERATURES OVER THE AREA. THERE IS QUITE A BIT OF UNCERTAINTY IN  
SATURDAY'S HIGH TEMPERATURES AS A RESULT OF THIS DISCREPANCY. THE  
COLDER/SLOWER SOLUTIONS WOULD ALSO BRING A CHANCE FOR SOME LIGHT  
SNOWFALL WITH THE SECONDARY SHORTWAVE, EVEN INTO THE HIGH PLAINS.  
THERE IS ACTUALLY BETTER AGREEMENT ON THE FORECAST BEYOND SATURDAY,  
WITH GOOD MODEL CONSENSUS SHOWING RIDGING BUILDING BACK INTO THE  
AREA AND SENDING TEMPERATURES BACK ABOVE SEASONAL NORMS FOR SUNDAY  
INTO MONDAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z TUESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1133 AM MDT MON OCT 13 2025  
 
CLOUDS ARE RAPIDLY MOVING INTO THE CWA ALONG WITH SHOWER ACTIVITY  
THAT WILL IMPACT ALL TERMINALS AT VARYING TIMES THROUGHOUT THE DAY,  
WEST TO EAST, WITH KRWL ALREADY REPORTING -SHRA. MOST OF THE SHOWERS  
WILL BE LIGHT, BUT MAY DROP VIS AND CIGS TO MVFR CONDITIONS IF A  
SHOWER PASSES DIRECTLY OVERHEAD. AS SUCH, PROB30 GROUPS WERE ADDED  
BECAUSE OF DIFFERENCES IN MODEL SOLUTIONS ON THE TIMING AND  
PLACEMENT OF SAID ACTIVITY. GUSTY WINDS WILL IMPACT ALL TERMINALS  
THROUGH THIS TAF PERIOD, PRIMARILY 25 TO 35 KNOTS, WHILE KLAR MAY  
SEE GUSTS EXCEEDING 40 KNOTS. FINALLY, FG AND LOW CIGS ARE POSSIBLE  
FOR TERMINALS ACROSS SOUTHEAST WYOMING AND THE NEBRASKA PANHANDLE  
TOWARDS THE END OF THIS TAF PERIOD.  
 

 
   
CYS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
WY...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...MN  
LONG TERM...MN  
AVIATION...RZ  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab WY Page
The Nexlab NE Page Main Text Page