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

- A few scattered rain showers linger across Fremont to Natrona Counties through early Friday morning before sunrise.

- Warmer and a dry rest of Friday in store ahead of the next weak system that will bring scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms for many locations east of the Divide Saturday. Strongest storms possible east of the Bighorns (20-30%) with gusty outflows the main hazard.

- Warming and dry trend for Sunday and for much of next week.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 100 AM MDT Fri May 8 2026

Northwest flow aloft continues across the CWA as depicted on WV imagery with the PFJ now retreated to the northeast coming out of Canada through eastern Montana to northeastern WY to the Great Plains. IR shows subsidence pushing in from the west as the ample cloud cover is pushing east out of the area by sunrise Friday morning. A few scattered showers linger across eastern Fremont and into Natrona County that will diminish and exit the CWA before sunrise as well.

Convergence and dry slotting expected for Friday with warmer temperatures (~5 degrees warmer than Thursday) with dry conditions expected. Some breezy winds west of the Divide and across the wind corridor, but nothing exceptional with an overall weak to moderate pressure gradient across the CWA. The next subtle shortwave will propagate down the northwest flow dropping a weak frontal boundary in from the north come Saturday morning. This will bring some scattered rain showers and isolated thunderstorms by Saturday afternoon and evening with 40-50% coverage and confidence a bit more northeast than it was Thursday. The strongest storms look to be east of the Bighorns for Johnson/Natrona Counties where CAPE values look to be more intriguing for Wyoming standards ~250-350 J/kg. Gusty outflows look to be the hazard outside of any lightning to occur and something to keep an eye on. Nothing of high significance but any rainfall will help in these areas. Regardless, once the sun sets, any lingering shower activity will weaken and exit to the east before midnight and dry out come Sunday morning.

Sunday and into next week will see a stronger upper level ridge to build in to be more oriented across the Rockies. This will bring much warmer temperatures and dry conditions for several days. Afternoon high temperatures east of the Divide look to push well into the 80s with 70s to the west. Breezy conditions will lead to elevated fire weather conditions due to the low RH values and warmer temperatures, even with greenup now ongoing for all zones. The next weather system of note looks to be by week's end late Thursday into Friday that should bring a reprieve from the warmer temperatures and increasing precipitation chances once again.

AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/

Issued at 1027 PM MDT Thu May 7 2026

Showers and a few thunderstorms continue to bubble currently from KCOD southeast to KCPR, but have been slowly fading in the past hour. Have kept some TEMPO groupings at KCOD/KWRL/KCPR for a couple more hours, but conditions should be improving quickly no later than 08Z. Any sites not currently seeing clear skies should be nearly clear by sunrise Friday. Most of the day Friday will see mostly clear skies with some wind gusts 20 to 25kts for KBPI/KPNA/KRKS. High cirrus aoa 25000 ft will start to move back in from the northwest around 00Z/09.

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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