textproduct: Pueblo
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
- Cold front late tonight into Tuesday morning will bring cooler temperatures to the Plains, with highs in the 40s.
- Dry weather with near to slightly warmer than normal temperatures are expected for Thanksgiving Day and for Friday as well.
- Increasing chances for a pattern change through the weekend, which will bring much cooler temperatures and chances for snow, especially for the mountains, but possibly for the plains as well.
SHORT TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY/
Issued at 207 PM MST Mon Nov 24 2025
Currently...quiet conditions prevail across southern Colorado this afternoon, with a few passing high level cirrus clouds. Winds are light, mainly less than 10 mph across the region. Temperatures are cool, with 50s for most areas on the Plains, and 40s over the San Luis Valley.
Tonight and Tuesday...broad northwesterly flow aloft will prevail through the next 24 hours across southern Colorado. Weak embedded energy will produce periods of mid and high cloud cover late tonight into Tuesday morning. Fog will once again be possible across the San Luis Valley, with visibility dropping to near 1 mile, especially for northern portions of the valley where snow remains. Caution is advised with any travel in the San Luis Valley overnight. Overnight lows on the Plains will fall into the upper 20s to lower 30s, while the valley falls into the teens and 20s.
A cold front associated with an upper trough passing well to the north will drop south across the Plains tomorrow morning. This will keep cooler air in place across the Plains, with mainly 40s for highs. Winds could be a bit gusty out east near the Kansas border in the morning, but should weaken through the afternoon. No precipitation is forecast with the frontal passage.
There could be a few light snow showers over the Central Mountains from late tonight through Tuesday afternoon, due to favorable northwesterly upslope flow. A light dusting of snow may be possible for west facing slopes north of Cottonwood Pass. Snow showers look to dissipate by tomorrow afternoon. Mozley
LONG TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/
Issued at 302 AM MST Mon Nov 24 2025
Tuesday Night and Wednesday..
Tuesday night looks to be one of the coldest nights we've seen so far this season, especially for our plains. The Lower Arkansas River Valley looks to cool down into teens, with low 20s elsewhere on the plains. Mountain valleys are likely to see lows in the low teens, which is typical for this time of year. The main difference between Tuesday and Wednesday is that our flow aloft becomes slightly more westerly as the northern low pushes east towards the Great Lakes, which will help to increase downsloping and warming a bit near the mountains. Temperatures will be a few degrees warmer, especially for our mountain adjacent plains, with highs in the low to mid 50s on Wednesday.
Thanksgiving Day and Friday..
Ridging builds back in across the region for Thursday and Friday, with highs returning to warmer than normal once again. Guidance is not nearing as extreme as our last warm spell though, and for now, highs are likely to remain in the 50s for our plains and 40s for our mountain valleys, which is only 5 to 10 degrees or so warmer than normal for most areas. Though precipitation is not expected though this period and the pattern will be dry overall, critical fire weather is not expected at this time. Humidity values look to stay 20% range or higher both afternoons, and winds look to stay weak as well under this pattern.
Saturday Onwards..
Models continue to favor the development of a trough out west through this weekend, though there seems to be little agreement about what it might do quite yet. Solutions have changed drastically in the past 24 hours, which suggests that there is a pattern change coming from Saturday onwards, but that the extent of our impacts are mostly still unknown at this stage. It does seem likely that we will see much cooler temperatures through the weekend, along with the potential for snow, especially for the high country, but possibly on the plains as well, as early as Saturday. Please come back for more details as the system gets closer in time and models come into more agreement about what impacts we should see here in southeast Colorado.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z WEDNESDAY/
Issued at 429 PM MST Mon Nov 24 2025
At KCOS and KPUB, VFR the next 24 hrs. Weak cold front Tue morning will keep wind nly through midday, before flow swings back to the se after 18z-20z.
At KALS, LIFR stratus and fog expected after 07z-08z, with fog lifting and VFR conditions returning 17z-18z. Winds will remain light and variable through the period.
PUB WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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