542  
FXUS65 KRIW 160433  
AFDRIW  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE RIVERTON WY  
1033 PM MDT WED OCT 15 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS CENTRAL WYOMING GRADUALLY  
DECREASE BY EARLY THURSDAY MORNING. BRIEF HEAVY RAIN AND SMALL  
HAIL ARE POSSIBLE WITH THE STRONGEST STORMS.  
 
- AN AREA OF LOW PRESSURE TRACKS FROM UTAH TONIGHT AND ACROSS  
WYOMING THURSDAY. COOLER TEMPERATURES AND WIDESPREAD  
PRECIPITATION OCCUR AS THIS SYSTEM MOVES THROUGH THE STATE.  
 
- SNOW FALLS IN THE MOUNTAINS THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT, WITH THE  
HEAVIEST SNOW FALLING BETWEEN 4 AM AND 12 PM THURSDAY. WINTER  
WEATHER TRAVEL IS LIKELY ACROSS MOUNTAIN PASSES. SNOW LEVELS  
COULD BE AS LOW 6500 FEET ACROSS SOUTHWEST WYOMING THURSDAY  
MORNING, THOUGH MOST ACCUMULATING SNOW FALLS ABOVE 8500 FEET.  
 

 
   
UPDATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 1223 PM MDT WED OCT 15 2025  
 
NOT MUCH CHANGE WITH THE OVERALL FORECAST THROUGH THE NEXT 48 HOURS  
OR SO. WITH THE LOW CLOUDS OVER THE BIGHORN BASIN AND JOHNSON COUNTY  
THIS MORNING, HAVE LOWERED HIGH TEMPERATURES AROUND 5 DEGREES, TO  
THE MID-TO-UPPER 50S. THE COLD FRONT IS STILL ON TRACK TO MOVE  
THROUGH TONIGHT, LOWERING SNOW LEVELS. SNOW AMOUNTS FOR THE WESTERN  
MOUNTAINS HAVE COME UP SLIGHTLY, BUT ARE STILL ONLY AROUND 8 TO 11  
INCHES AT THE HIGHEST PEAKS OF THE TETON, WIND RIVER, AND SALT RIVER  
RANGES. THE HIGHEST PEAKS OF THE BIGHORNS (ABOVE 9500 FEET) COULD  
SEE UP TO ABOUT 9 INCHES, BUT THIS IS TOO LOCALIZED FOR ANY  
HIGHLIGHTS. THE BIGHORN MOUNTAIN PASSES (GRANITE AND POWDER RIVER)  
SHOULD SEE 3 TO 5 INCHES. OTHERWISE, MOUNTAINS SHOULD GENERALLY SEE  
UP TO 8 OR 9 INCHES. SNOW LEVELS SHOULD LOWER ENOUGH FOR SOME LIGHT  
SNOW OVER THE LOWER ELEVATIONS WEST OF THE DIVIDE, INCLUDING BIG  
PINEY, PINEDALE, KEMMERER, AND ROCK SPRINGS. FLAKES ARE POSSIBLE IN  
STAR AND JACKSON VALLEYS. LOWEST SNOW LEVELS SHOULD OCCUR THURSDAY  
MORNING, BEING 6700 TO 7000 FEET.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 253 AM MDT WED OCT 15 2025  
 
THE QUESTION OF THE DAY CONTINUES TO BE WHAT WILL HAPPEN WITH THE  
UPPER LEVEL LOW THAT IS NOW SWIRLING OVER CALIFORNIA AND WILL MOVE  
TOWARD AND OVER THE COWBOY STATE OVER THE NEXT 36 TO 48 HOURS. AND  
THE GOOD NEWS IS THAT THERE IS MORE AGREEMENT IN THE MODEL GUIDANCE  
THIS MORNING, ALTHOUGH THERE ARE SOME DIFFERENCES IN THE EXACT TRACK  
THAT WILL MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN POTENTIAL PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS (TRY  
SAYING THOSE THREE WORDS FAST FIVE TIMES, A BIT OF A TONGUE  
TWISTER). WELL, LET US DIVE IN.  
 
WE CURRENTLY HAVE A FEW AREAS OF MAINLY LIGHT SHOWERS MOVING  
NORTHWARD ACROSS THE AREA. A COUPLE OF THUNDERSTORMS ARE ALSO NOTED,  
BUT NOTHING STRONG AND THESE ARE MAINLY IN IDAHO. TODAY LOOKS LIKE  
IT WILL BE INVERSE OF YESTERDAY, WHEN WE HAD MORE SHOWER COVERAGE IN  
THE MORNING AND THEN DECREASING IN THE AFTERNOON. SHOWERS SHOULD  
BECOME MORE NUMEROUS IN THE AFTERNOON AS THE LOW GETS CLOSER TO THE  
AREA. AND THIS IS WHERE WE STILL HAVE SOME UNCERTAINTY WITH THE  
TRACK OF THE LOW. SOME GUIDANCE, LIKE EUROPEAN MODEL, SHOW THE LOW  
MOVING FURTHER SOUTH, WHICH WOULD BRING A BETTER CHANCE OF SHOWERS  
ACROSS CENTRAL WYOMING THIS AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT. OTHERS, LIKE THE  
GFS, BRING THE LOW AROUND 75 MILES FURTHER NORTH, AND THIS COULD  
BRING A DRY SLOT INTO CENTRAL WYOMING, KEEPING THINGS LARGELY DRY.  
FOR NOW, WE KEPT SOME POPS IN THE AREA BUT CHANCES ARE GENERALLY LESS  
THAN 1 OUT OF 3 IN ANY GIVEN AREA BEFORE BETTER CHANCES MOVE IN  
LATER WEDNESDAY NIGHT AS THE LOW MAKES A CLOSER APPROACH. THE MOST  
NUMEROUS SHOWERS WILL BE ACROSS WESTERN WYOMING THOUGH. AND, THERE  
COULD EVEN BE A FEW STRONGER THUNDERSTORMS. CAPE IS RATHER LIMITED,  
ONLY AROUND 300 J/KG AT THE MOST. HOWEVER, LIFTED INDICES DROP TO  
AROUND MINUS 3 IN THE AFTERNOON ACROSS PORTIONS OF JOHNSON AND  
NATRONA COUNTY. THERE WILL BE DECENT UPPER LEVEL DIVERGENCE AND  
SOME DIRECTION SHEAR AS WELL. NOTHING WIDESPREAD IS EXPECTED BUT  
THERE COULD BE A FEW MORE FEISTY STORMS. THE STORM PREDICTION  
CENTER AGREES AND HAS ISSUED A MARGINAL RISK FOR NATRONA COUNTY.  
 
THE OTHER CONCERN IS SNOW. FEW PROBLEMS ARE EXPECTED THROUGH THE  
DAYLIGHT HOURS TODAY, AS SNOW LEVELS SHOULD REMAIN ABOVE 8500 FEET  
AND EVEN ABOVE THIS STILL WARM GROUND AND BORDERLINE TEMPERATURES  
SHOULD MELT SNOW ON ROADS. A COLD FRONT WILL PRESS ACROSS THE AREA  
TONIGHT AND DROP SNOW LEVELS TO AROUND 7000 TO 7500 FEET BY THURSDAY  
MORNING AND POSSIBLY AS LOW AS 6500 FEET IN SOME AREAS EAST OF THE  
DIVIDE AS 700 MILLIBAR TEMPERATURES MAY FALL AS LOW AS MINUS 4 TO  
MINUS 5. AS FOR THE ADVISORIES, THEY STILL LOOK REASONABLY SO FEW  
CHANGES WILL BE MADE THIS MORNING. THE AREAS WITH AT LEAST A 1 OUT  
OF 2 CHANCE OF 6 INCHES OF SNOW OR MORE ARE COVERED BY THE  
ADVISORIES FOR THE MOST PART. I DO HAVE A SMALL CONCERN THAT SOME  
PORTIONS OF THE BIGHORN RANGE MAY RECEIVE 6 INCHES OR MORE BUT THESE  
WOULD BE THE HIGHER PEAKS AND THEREFORE IMPACTS WOULD BE LIMITED.  
THE STEADIEST PRECIPITATION STILL LOOKS TO FALL IN THE 18 HOUR  
PERIOD FROM LATE TONIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY AFTERNOON, WITH SHOWERS  
LATER THURSDAY AS THE LOW MOVES AWAY TO THE SOUTH AND EAST. AS FOR  
TOTAL PRECIPITATION, MOST AREAS NORTH OF A KEMMERER TO CASPER LINE  
HAVE AT LEAST A 1 OUT OF 2 CHANCE OF A QUARTER OF AN INCH OR GREATER  
OVER THE NEXT 24 HOURS. THE HIGHEST AMOUNTS STILL LOOK TO BE IN  
NORTHWESTERN WYOMING, WITH A LEAST A 1 OUT OF 2 CHANCE OF GREATER  
THAN THREE QUARTERS OF AN INCH OF QPF OVER THE SAME TIME PERIOD.  
 
MOST GUIDANCE IS SHOWING FRIDAY AS A DRY DAY WITH RIDGING OVER  
THE AREA. ANOTHER FAST MOVING COLD FRONT WILL MOVE IN FROM THE  
NORTH ON SATURDAY. THERE CONTINUES TO BE DIFFERENCES IN GUIDANCE  
IN REGARDS TO SHOWER CHANCES THOUGH. FOR NOW, WE LEANED TOWARD  
THE DRIER END SINCE THE FRONT IS OF CONTINENTAL ORIGIN AND  
DOESN'T HAVE A LOT OF MOISTURE TO WORK WITH. DRIER AND WARMER  
WEATHER THEN RETURNS ON SUNDAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1031 PM MDT WED OCT 15 2025  
 
300MB 100KT JET AND DIFFLUENCE ALOFT HAS BEEN DRIVING ONGOING  
CONVECTION WEDNESDAY EVENING AHEAD OF A TIGHTLY WOUND UPPER LOW OVER  
UTAH. THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH THE EARLY MORNING HOURS THURSDAY WILL  
GENERALLY BE CONFINED TO NATRONA AND JOHNSON COUNTIES. OTHERWISE,  
SCATTERED WEAKER CONVECTION SPREADS SOUTH-TO-NORTH ACROSS THE  
FORECAST AREA OVERNIGHT. IFR/MVFR CEILINGS REMAIN ACROSS THE BIGHORN  
BASIN AND FROM KCPR TO KBYG.  
 
IFR/MVFR CONDITIONS BECOME MORE WIDESPREAD EARLY THURSDAY MORNING AS  
THE CLOSED LOW MOVES NORTHEAST AND BEGINS TO CROSS THE REGION. THE  
BEST CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION IS STILL BETWEEN 10Z-18Z/THURSDAY.  
EXPECT THE IFR/MVFR CEILINGS TO INFILTRATE KRIW AND KLND BETWEEN 08Z-  
12Z/THURSDAY BEHIND NORTHERLY SURFACE FLOW. AT KRKS, ADDITIONAL LIFT  
PROVIDED BY THE CLOSED LOW SHOULD PROVIDE A PERIOD OF MORE INTENSE  
PRECIPITATION, LIKELY IN THE FORM OF SNOW, THURSDAY MORNING LEADING  
TO IFR/MVFR CONDITIONS. GUSTY WEST TO NORTHWEST SURFACE WIND 15-  
30KTS ARRIVES IN SOUTHWEST WYOMING AROUND MIDDAY THURSDAY ALLOWING  
FOR CONDITIONS TO DRY OUT AND IMPROVE, ESPECIALLY AT KRKS.  
SIMILARLY, WEST-SOUTHWEST SURFACE WIND PUSHES INTO KCPR AND ERODES  
THE LOWER CEILINGS AS VFR RETURNS AROUND 18Z-20Z/THURSDAY. HOWEVER,  
THERE IS THE POTENTIAL (30 PERCENT) THAT THE WIND DOES NOT  
MATERIALIZE AS EARLY AND PESKY LOWER CEILINGS PERSIST. THE GENERAL  
TREND BETWEEN 23Z/THURSDAY AND 03Z/FRIDAY WILL BE TOWARD DRIER AND  
DEVELOPING VFR FROM WEST-TO-EAST. MOUNTAIN TOPS OBSCURED ACROSS THE  
BIGHORN BASIN THROUGHOUT THE FORECAST PERIOD, WHILE MOUNTAIN TOPS  
ARE OBSCURED ACROSS THE REMAINDER OF THE AREA.  
 

 
   
RIW WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 11 PM MDT THURSDAY FOR WYZ002-  
012-014-015-024.  
 

 
 

 
 
UPDATE...WITTMANN  
DISCUSSION...HATTINGS  
AVIATION...CNJ  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab WY Page Main Text Page