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

- Winter Weather Advisories have been expanded to include all of Laramie County through 5 AM this morning. 1 to 2 inches of additional accumulation is possible through 5 AM.

- High Wind Warnings remain in effect through 8 AM this morning for Arlington/Elk Mountain, the I-80 Summit, and the Foothills. Best chances for Arlington come to an end around 5 AM, with the Summit and Foothills ending around 8 AM.

- Another round of snow will be possible on Friday as a second system attempts to develop across the Rockies. 1 to 2 inches of snow is possible for the lower elevations along I-80, with 3 to 5 additional inches possible in the mountains.

- Bitterly cold temperatures are possible both Friday morning and Saturday morning as skies look to clear overnight and fresh snowpack tanks overnight lows. Breezy conditions Saturday morning may lead to increasing wind chill concerns.

- Another wide spread high wind event may be possible on Tuesday and potentially continuing through Thursday.

SHORT TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/

Issued at 151 AM MST Thu Feb 19 2026

Active weather will continue for the next several days as a broad upper-level trough slowly pushes across the Intermountain West through Saturday morning. The Colorado Low currently impacting the region and giving many places accumulating snowfall will advect off to the east through the morning hours today. Snow chances will begin to diminish late this morning into the early evening hours. A very weak 700mb ridge will develop behind the departing low as heights begin to rise once more and cold air leads to higher surface pressure. This developing ridge will act to force the coldest 700mb temperatures back to the north, though 700mb temperatures will remain in the -15 to -13C Thursday evening. With these colder 700mb temperatures and a fresh snowpack, surface temperatures will max out in the teens and 20s for Thursday, with frigid overnight low expected, in the negatives to single digits. Unfortunately, clouds will begin to clear Thursday evening, leading to most clear skies across much of the region Thursday night into Friday morning. With the fresh snowpack expected, this could be a perfect storm for overnight lows to tank further than currently forecast, especially in the Panhandle that cools off very rapidly with clear skies and a fresh snowpack. Therefore, lower confidence at this time for the overnight lows Thursday night into Friday morning. Thankfully, winds look to be light Thursday night, so extremely cold wind chill values, lower than about -25F, are not expected at this time. Wind chill values between -15 and -10F cannot be ruled out early Friday morning, especially if skies clear. However, this may change as confidence increases in these overnight lows.

As for the remaining snowfall chances today, the Colorado Low bringing snowfall to the area tonight will slowly move easterly, likely riding the border between Nebraska and Kansas through the afternoon hours. The best rising motion for snowfall will end west to east as the Low moves away from the area and isentropic lift starts to decrease around 12 to 15Z this morning. Locations north and east will see favorable isentropic lift and lift from the Low through the early afternoon hours, leading to continued snow accumulation through about 18 to 21Z this afternoon. Additional snowfall accumulations across the area are expected to be between 1 and 6 inches, with the lowest values further west and the higher 6+ inch values near the Pine Ridge and northern portions of the CWA. All Winter Headlines appear to be on track. However, did decide to add most of Laramie County to the Winter Weather Advisory as a heavy band of snow remained stationary over the county, dropping 3+ inches of snow. A few additional bands may push through Laramie County through the early morning hours, so additional snowfall accumulations between 1 and 3 inches is possible, with highest additional totals over eastern portions of the county. This Winter Weather Advisory goes through 12Z this morning, when the best lift is expected to move out of this region.

Finally, the high winds expected this morning have struggled to get started, with the Arlington zone only gusting around 55 mph as of 08Z this morning. Height gradients have decreased into the upper-30s this morning, but 700mb winds will start increasing towards 50kts this morning, especially across the I-80 Summit and Foothills. The best period for hitting high wind criteria in those areas looks to be from about 09Z through 15Z this morning as the low strengthens, but is still far enough west to impact the region. In-house random forest guidance keeps about a 40% chance for high winds through 15Z this morning for the I-80 Summit and Foothill, with the Arlington zone decreasing to about 30% by 12Z this morning. The best chances for high winds at Arlington will come to an end shortly after 12Z, with the Summit and Foothills seeing the best chance between about 09 and 15Z. While parameters are borderline in these locations, decided to keep the High Wind Warnings in effect through the expiration time, due to uncertainty in these zones hitting criteria.

Friday will feature another shot at accumulating snow across the region as the neutrally tilted, upper-level trough continues its eastward progression with a strong jet across the southern CONUS. A 500mb shortwave is progged to develop west of the Rocky Mountains and traverse across them Friday morning into the early afternoon hours. Colorado Low development on the eastward side of the Rockies looks limited as of now, however, the shortwave at both 500mb and 700mb should generate enough synoptic forcing to get snow to develop once again. The surface low that attempts to develop across southeastern Colorado will be a little too far south to produce the typical set up for a Colorado Low, but easterly flow to the north of the diffuse low will favor upslope development along I-80 in southeastern Wyoming. Looking at isentropic lift from the NAM, ECMWF, and GFS, suggests isentropic lift developing across southwestern portions of the CWA to include portions of Laramie County. Good, moist isentropic lift is expected through about 00Z Friday evening, leading to continued snow chances throughout most of the day Friday, especially across the higher terrain out west. Isentropic lift shuts off as the shortwave pushes further to the east, between about 00 and 06Z Friday night. All snow showers should dissipate by very early Saturday morning, but not before dropping another 3-5 inches of snow in the mountain and around an inch or so in the lower elevations. While an inch is not a ton of snow, it is still much better than what we have been seeing this winter season.

Early Saturday morning the upper-level trough begins to lift out of the area, with an upper-level ridge beginning to build over the western CONUS once more. The best forcing will be out of the area by 12 to 15Z Saturday morning into the evening, leading to snow tapering off across the region. On the backside of this second system, height gradients at 700mb will strengthen as the ridge builds while the low is still moving off the east. A 35 to 40kt jet will develop at 700mb, leading to some breezy conditions across the region Saturday morning into the afternoon and evening hours. With breezy winds and cold overnight low temperatures, Friday night into Saturday morning will be quite cold with wind chill values likely dropping back into the negative single digits for Saturday morning. However, once again skies look to clear into overnight Saturday so locations with a snowpack, especially those across the Panhandle, may tank lower than currently forecast and with breezy conditions combined, temperatures may start to approach extreme cold criteria. Confidence in extreme cold Saturday morning is low right now, but will continue to monitor it over the next model cycles.

LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/

Issued at 151 AM MST Thu Feb 19 2026

Quieter weather is expected to return Sunday through Tuesday as an upper-level ridge dominates the western CONUS. 700mb temperatures will warm quickly under this ridge, leading to a strong warming trend through the weekend and early week. Sunday highs are in the 30s and 40s, with Monday and Tuesday back into the 50s and 60s area- wide. However, with warmer temperatures typically comes stronger winds. On Tuesday, a strong 700mb jet will develop across the Laramie Range as the region becomes squeezed between the high to the south and west and the developing low to the north and east. The GFS currently suggests a 700mb jet between 65 and 70kts, with the ECMWF not too far behind with a jet around 50kts. Downward omega values are currently progged to be maxed out along and east of the Laramie Range, favoring yet another widespread high wind event. In-house random forest guidance is currently very excited about this event, with a nearly 80% chance for high winds at Arlington, 60% change at Bordeaux and the I-Summit and Foothills, as well as 20% for Cheyenne proper. Due to the lower number of training events for Cheyenne proper, a value from this guidance around 25% starts to indicate a very strong chance for high winds. Therefore, Tuesday looks to be windy yet again, with strong winds likely continuing through potentially Thursday as 700mb gradients remain elevated. This is still several days out, but something to pay attention to this weekend and with future forecast packages.

AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/

Issued at 1035 PM MST Wed Feb 18 2026

A system currently moving through the CWA is bringing a mixed-bag of flight categories and will continue to throughout this TAF period. All terminals will see, if not already, snow at varying times and intensity through the overnight hours. As a result, CIGs and VIS have and will continue to drop to as low as IFR and/or LIFR in moderate or heavy snowfall. In addition, expect gusty winds in the 20-30 knot range that may further reduce VIS in BLSN. Snow will begin to diminish from southwest to northeast, starting in the next few hours for KRWL while KCDR will see the snow ending by 20Z Thursday.

CYS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

WY...Winter Weather Advisory until 11 AM MST this morning for WYZ102-103. Winter Weather Advisory until 8 AM MST this morning for WYZ106>108. Winter Storm Warning until 11 AM MST this morning for WYZ101. Winter Weather Advisory until 5 AM MST early this morning for WYZ104-109-110-114-117>119. High Wind Warning until 8 AM MST this morning for WYZ110-116- 117. Winter Storm Warning until 5 AM MST early this morning for WYZ112. NE...Winter Weather Advisory until 2 PM MST this afternoon for NEZ002-095. Winter Weather Advisory until 11 AM MST this morning for NEZ003-021. Winter Weather Advisory until 8 AM MST this morning for NEZ019- 020-096.


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