textproduct: Cheyenne
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
- High winds remains possible Thursday morning, with another round possible on Friday.
- Accumulating snow possible in the Snowy and Sierra Madre Ranges Thursday and Friday. Winter Weather Advisories are in effect.
- Above average temperatures, breezy conditions and a chance of precipitation primarily in the mountains expected through early next week, with a pattern change possible late.
SHORT TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/
Issued at 205 AM MST Thu Jan 1 2026
Quieter weather begins to come to an end this afternoon as the next upper-level system starts to impact the region. Upper-level ridging will begin to break down late this morning into the early afternoon hours as an upper-level trough digs into the West Coast and a shortwave ejects out ahead of it. Two wave are expected with the upcoming system. The first will be related to the shortwave ejecting out ahead of the primary trough, with the second wave being to primary trough moving in behind the shortwave. The shortwave will bring an initial surge of 500mb vorticity into the region along with enhanced Pacific moisture, with both reaching southwest Carbon County by 18Z this morning. The next wave will bring another strong vorticity maxima into the same region and reinforcing Pacific moisture, acting to prolong synoptic-scale lift throughout the day and into the overnight hours. 700mb winds have turned southwesterly this morning, favoring upslope development along the Sierra Madres. As the 500mb vorticity pushes into the area this morning, snowfall is expected to start right around 18 to 21Z this afternoon. Surface flow will initially be southerly, favoring the Sierra Madres and prevent the Snowies from being completely shadowed, as is seen with southwesterly surface flow. According to the NAEFS Mean Climatological percentile, precipitable water values will be above the 99th percentile by 21Z this afternoon, suggesting significant snow accumulations during the early portions of this event. PW values will remain above the 99th percentile throughout the duration of the snowfall. Therefore, snowfall totals of between 10 and 20 inches will be possible in the Sierra Madres and Snowies. Decided to keep the Winter Weather Advisories going rather than upgrading to Winter Storm Warnings as the highest totals (12 to 18 inches) looks to remain primarily above 9000 feet, with the highest peaks potentially seeing 20+ inches of snow throughout the event. Future shifts may decide to upgrade as models come into better agreement of just how much snow will fall in the mountains, as they currently range from a minimum of around 8 inches to a maximum of 25 inches.
Later tonight into the early morning hours Friday, 700mb winds begin to turn due westerly as a 700mb shortwave pushes across northern Wyoming and a surface low pressure system develops across north central Wyoming. As this low pressure system deepens throughout the night, 700mb winds increase to around 50 to 55kts along the Laramie Range. Modest GFS downward omega values will favor some of these winds mixing down to the surface and potentially resulting in gusts at or above 60mph. In-house random forest guidance has pretty low probabilities for Bordeaux hitting high winds, only around 25 to 30%, with Arlington favored more at around 60 to 65% probability. Unlike recent events, 700mb flow is more favorable for strong to high winds across the wind prone tonight into Friday morning, but gradients are overall weaker and the time period with the best chance for high winds will likely be cut off by the cold front associated with the surface low pressure system. If winds do hit high wind criteria, it will likely be brief and with the fairly weak cold front, gusts to 60mph do not look as likely behind the frontal passage. As a result, decided not to issue any wind headlines and let the day crew take another look at future model runs to determine how likely high winds are in the wind prones. A short-fuse High Wind Warning may be needed, but will ultimately let day crew make the final decision.
Friday will mostly see a transitional pattern from the upper-level trough moving through and the intermittent messy upper-level flow before the next upper-level ridge builds into the region. Breezy conditions will remain likely behind the front, but given its weaker temperature gradient, high winds are not expected a this time. Mountain snowfall will slowly come to an end throughout the day Friday, likely ending around 00Z Saturday. Temperatures will hit the maximum shortly before 21Z, before the front moves through. Temperatures will continue to drop throughout the afternoon and evening hours Friday. Highs are currently forecast to be in the low- 40s to mid-50s.
LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
Issued at 205 AM MST Thu Jan 1 2026
No major changes to the long term forecast. Please see previous discussion from CB...
A quick moving system from off of California will continue to disrupt the upper level ridge pattern into the the weekend, helping to bring a bit more breeziness and mountain precipitation to the region.
Models show the leading edge of the upper level ridge to be just to the west of the CWA with a weak upper level low undercutting the area Friday night. This will bring will bring in a weak round of precipitation in the form of snow to the Sierra Madres. Raw ensembles show the heaviest snow accumulations will be Friday afternoon. Over night accumulations of up to an inch along the highest peaks will occur (80-90% confidence). Elsewhere will remain dry as the upper level ridge remains mostly in place. This will also enhance the winds along the ridgetops with models showing strong downsloping along the Sierra Madres, Snowy Range, primarily the southern Laramie Range out through the Cheyenne Ridge. Raw ensembles show wind gusts nearing 50 mph (50-60% confidence). Winds will settle overnight taking on a diurnal pattern with gusts dropping to 30-35 mph.
Saturday through Monday afternoon will remain dry as models continue to remain in firm agreement with the upper level ridge remaining in place. Dry conditions will persist through Monday. However, a disturbance will shift around the pattern bringing heightened winds back Sunday. A strong 700 mb jet will align with the North Laramie Range with a decent downsloping signal. There is also a weaker 700 mb jet aligning with the Snowy Range. 45-55% of the raw ensembles show these areas will see winds between 45-50 mph. Models show the winds settling down Sunday afternoon with winds settling to 25-30 mph gusts overnight. Models do show there is a 60-80% probability of the lower elevations seeing gusts nearing 30 mph as well.
Monday models show the back end of the upper level ridge to be breaking down as an upper level low digs in from the PacNW. South- west flow aloft will allow for some moisture advection to infiltrate the western portion of the CWA bringing in some mountain snow. In- house calculations show the ridgetops of the Sierra Madre Range has 60-80% probability of seeing 5-7 inches of snow accumulating between Monday and Tuesday. The Snow Range has 40-50% probabilities of seeing 1.5-2.5 inches. Areas between 7000-8000 feet will see between 0.5-1 inches while elsewhere will remain dry. Winds associated with this disturbance will also increase the winds Monday into Tuesday with the ridgetops seeing winds of 30-40 mph gusts (50-70%) while the lower elevations will see 25-30 mph.
AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z FRIDAY/
Issued at 403 AM MST Thu Jan 1 2026
VFR conditions expected for the first half of the 12Z TAF period before lower ceilings and rain/snow showers start to move into the area from west to east. Ceilings begin to decrease starting at 17Z at KRWL, then continue to decrease to the east. Rain/snow showers will drop KRWL into the MVFR category and will start to approach the IFR category late in the period. Showers will move east during the afternoon and evening hours, with overcast skies expected everywhere by 03Z. Primary aviation concerns will be decreasing ceilings and visibility where rain/snow showers occur this afternoon, as well as gusty winds at all the terminals.
CYS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
WY...Winter Weather Advisory from 11 AM this morning to 5 PM MST Friday for WYZ112-114. NE...None.
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.