textproduct: Boise

This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.

KEY MESSAGES

- Heat Advisory today for lower elevations of southwest Idaho and southeast Oregon, extending through Monday evening for south-central Idaho.

- Breezy afternoon winds through the weekend. - Showers and thunderstorms return late Monday through the week, with peak coverage on Tuesday.

- Hot temperatures remain through the week.

SHORT TERM /Through Monday Night/

A Heat Advisory remains in effect today as temperatures in the Snake Plain, Weiser Basin, and Southwest Highlands of Idaho reach max temperatures in the upper 90s and lower 100s. The south-southwest flow across the region will make it a very hot day even outside the heat advisory. Clouds tomorrow will moderate temps for the lower elevations to the mid 90s, except in the upper Snake Plain near the Magic Valley where temps will approach 100 degrees for a second day. The Heat Advisory in the Magic Valley will continue through Sunday as a result.

The increasing clouds are the first hint at more moisture flux into the region due to the broader circulation around the central Rockies. This flow is injecting warm moisture from the Pacific and Gulf of California. The heat, moisture, and latent instability will be enough to kick off isolated dry thunderstorms late Monday afternoon and evening. Especially in Southeast Oregon, far Southwest Idaho, and Central Idaho mountains. Thunderstorms will be capable of gusty outflow winds and heavy downpours.

LONG TERM /Tuesday through Saturday/

Southerly/southwesterly flow aloft will be maintained throughout the long term period as consistent upper-level troughing will be off the Pacific NW coast and upper-level ridging will remain cemented in the central CONUS. Consequently, mid and high-level monsoonal moisture will stream into the area, bringing PWAT values at or above 0.8" in lower elevations and at or above 0.6" in higher elevations through the period. The strongest push of moisture happens Tuesday, with PWAT values over 1.00" in lower elevations and above 0.8" in higher elevations (above 90th percentile climatology with localized spots higher than 95th percentile). This will enhance shower and thunderstorm coverage across southeast Oregon and southwest Idaho by Tuesday afternoon, with greater uncertainty for exact moisture placement Wednesday onward. Heavy downpours are likely with stronger convection, along with gusty, rain-driven cold pools as low-levels moisten further. Greatest concern will primarily be flash-flood potential Tuesday and Wednesday (especially over burn scars).

Late Tuesday into Wednesday, an incoming Pacific trough will move inland, nudging the bulk of the monsoonal moisture eastward by Wednesday. As a result, storm chances will decrease for Wednesday and Thursday, though higher terrain (primarily in SW Idaho) remains susceptible to convective development both days. Despite the eastward shift of the high pressure center, temperatures will remain hot all week...hovering around 5 degrees above normal. While model guidance begins to diverge toward the end of the week regarding moisture placement, a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms remains over higher terrain. Models stay in general agreement that hot southwest flow aloft will dominate through at least Friday/Saturday.

AVIATION /18Z Saturday through Sunday/

Issued 1120 AM MDT SAT JUL 11 2026

VFR with increasing high clouds this afternoon. Areas of reduced visibility from wildfire smoke/haze. High density altitude due to heat. Surface winds: variable 5-15 kt through morning, becoming SE-SW 5-15 kt in the afternoon. Afternoon gusts 20-30 kt, mainly over southeast OR and high terrain of southwest ID. Winds aloft at 10kft MSL: S-SW 15-30 kt.

KBOI...VFR with increasing high clouds this afternoon. Visibility reduced at times by wildfire smoke in foothills NE of KBOI. High density altitude due to heat. Surface winds: E-S 5-12 kt, becoming variable under 10 kts after sunset.

Sunday Outlook...VFR and BKN-OVC high clouds. Areas of reduced visibility from wildfire smoke/haze. High density altitude due to heat. Surface winds: SW-NW 5-15 kt with afternoon gusts to 20-25 kt.

BOI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

ID...Heat Advisory until 9 PM MDT this evening for IDZ012-014-015- 033. Heat Advisory until 9 PM MDT Monday for IDZ016-030. OR...Heat Advisory until 9 PM MDT /8 PM PDT/ this evening for ORZ064.


IMPORTANT This is an independent project and has no affiliation with the National Weather Service or any other agency. Do not rely on this website for emergency or critical information: please visit weather.gov for the most accurate and up-to-date information available.

textproduct.us is built and maintained by Joshua Thayer.