textproduct: Western and Central Wyoming
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
- Scattered rain showers and storms continue through this evening, with the main hazard being gusty outflow winds 30 to 55 mph. This convective activity will end by midnight.
- Warm temperatures continue for Monday and Tuesday, along with shower and thunderstorm chances (15 to 45 percent). Best chances occur along and west of the Continental Divide.
- Daily shower and thunderstorm chances continue through the rest of the week. The areas with the best chances change day- to-day.
UPDATE
Issued at 1238 PM MDT Sun May 24 2026
Not much change to the forecast for today. Showers, and some thunderstorms, will be fairly widespread across the area today, at least in coverage, but specific locations only have a 15 to 40 percent chance of actually getting convection over them. The main hazard with this will be gusty outflow winds. Given dew point depressions around 50 degrees, would expect outflow gusts up to 55 mph being a possibility, with a 30 to 50 mph range being the most likely. Otherwise, temperatures climb again today, reaching the 70s for most locations, with low-to-mid 80s for the Bighorn Basin and Johnson County. Convection should quickly diminish after sunset, with the last few showers waning between 10pm and midnight.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 100 AM MDT Sun May 24 2026
As with most things with forecasting the weather, there are some things we know, and some things we don't know. And, there is no exception to this as I write this early on Sunday morning. I am listening to hair metal this morning, and the song Dirty Love just came on. And this ties into the main hazard over the next several days. The above mentioned song is by a British hard rock band called Thunder (they were a thing for a brief time in the early 90s). We will have daily chances of thunder for the next several days. That is the part we know. The part we don't know, especially a few days out, are the coverage and placement of the storms.
We currently have a few showers out there, largely in southwestern Wyoming. Little if any of the precipitation is reaching the ground though. The main driver of the thunder today will be a shortwave moving in from the west and some increasing moisture from the southwest. This should increase coverage of showers and storms this afternoon and evening. There is good model agreement of having the highest coverage (about a 2 in 5 chance) across the southwest with tapering chances further to the north and east. Precipitable water values are about 50 percent higher than yesterday. However, model soundings continue to show Inverted Vs along with high cloud bases. Dew point depressions are also over 40 degrees in many locations once again. What this means is that although there is a better chance for some rain to reach the ground, there will still be a lot of virga showers and possibly dry thunderstorms. And this means that we have the potential of strong wind gusts from any shower or thunderstorm. Most convection again looks diurnal and should decrease after sunset.
Memorial Day may end up being a bit drier than today, as heights rise by around 40 decameters and precipitable water values fall by around 25 percent. Most guidance is fairly consistent with this. Most guidance is also in decent agreement in most of the showers and storms remaining West of the Divide with less than a 1 out of 5 chance East of the Divide. With the southwest flow, temperatures should average 5 to 10 degrees above normal through the holiday weekend.
The uncertainty really increases as we head into Tuesday and the rest of the week. And what happens is dependent on the position of two features. One, is a strong ridge that will be found across the midwest. The second, which has more impact on us, is one of the features that leads many meteorologists to early hair loss. It is a stacked upper level low that will move onshore in the Pacific Northwest Monday night and Tuesday and drift toward the Great Basin for the middle of the week. It looks like it will cut off from the main low and sit for a few days, but exactly where will be the determining factor for our weather. Ensemble guidance is all over the place. With the deterministic models, the GFS, which has been flip-flopping more than a fish out of water, now keeps the low west of Wyoming before opening it up into a trough for the end of the week. The European model has been more consistent, keeping the low a but further south during the middle of the week before moving it northward about 24 hours later, again West of Wyoming. As for the forecast, the low will continue to feed moisture into the area, and as a result there should be some showers and thunderstorms around each day. However, the moisture may be more of the mid and high level variety. Model soundings at this time show largely inverted Vs which would imply more high based showers and storms. But a lot depends on the ultimate path of the low, and cut off lows are one of the most difficult things to forecast. If it moves further east, we have a better chance of some still needed rain. And as far as placement and timing of the showers and storms, a lot depends on shortwaves rotating around it and these are difficult to time this far out. For now, we kept the forecast largely broadbrushed with more POPs in the mountains and western Wyoming and precipitation largely diurnal. Temperatures look to be near to slightly above normal through the period.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z TUESDAY/
Issued at 524 PM MDT Sun May 24 2026
Scattered convection, including isolated thunderstorms, continues to track east across the forecast area. The tail end of a shortwave exiting Montana is draped across the north half of the region, while the moisture feed continues to stream eastward across the south. Given a high-based, dry sub-cloud layer, the primary hazard with any convection remains gusty outflow wind of 30-40kts, with localized gusts around 45kts. Other than brief (less than 20-minute) MVFR with an isolated intense shower over southwest Wyoming, all terminals will be VFR through Monday afternoon. Ongoing convection fizzles 03Z-06Z/Monday allowing for dissipating clouds overnight. The upper flow backs to the south-southwest Monday ahead of a deepening trough to our west. This should keep the initial round of scattered Monday afternoon showers/storms along and west of a KRKS-KCOD line before seeing another push after 00Z/Tuesday. Gusty outflow wind 35-45kts will be the primary hazard with the convection.
Please see the Aviation Weather Center and/or CWSU ZDV and ZLC for the latest information on icing and turbulence forecasts.
RIW WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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