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
- Light rain/mountain snow continues over northwestern Wyoming, ending through the rest of the evening.
- Gusty winds will also begin to subside through the evening, with the strongest gusts occurring through 8PM.
- Another night of cool temperatures tonight. Western valleys and basins will likely see a frost, with lows in the mid-20s to mid-30s.
- Trending warmer this week. Dry and breezy conditions bring elevated fire weather concerns. Rain chances will occur, but are very limited, so most areas remain dry.
UPDATE
Issued at 1231 PM MDT Mon Jun 29 2026
Most of the area remains dry today. Some very light snow over the western mountains continues through today, though most has already occurred this past morning. Winds are the main forecast point today, with widespread gusts 25 to 50 mph for the area. Wind prone locations see gusts to around 60 mph.
Another night of cooler temperatures, with western valleys and basins seeing similar lows tonight as last night, in the mid-20s to low-30s. East of the Divide, lows are in the upper-40s, which could impact some sensitive plants. Tuesday begins a warming trend, with highs around 10 degrees warmer than today.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 200 AM MDT Mon Jun 29 2026
WV imagery continues to show the deep elongated trough across the Rocky Mountain West, with colder cloud tops through the CWA depicted on IR. Weak, distorted fingers of the PFJ aid in supporting the mainly closed low over MT with divergence aloft lacking in strong support of any significant weather. A minor S/W is pushing through the CWA overnight giving way to a few light rain showers stretching from eastern Sweetwater northeast to Johnson County that will slowly push east out of the area by sunrise Monday morning. Limited in rainfall if any, due to dry surface conditions, will mainly see an impact of lower cloud cover through a couple hours post-sunrise. Less clouds west of the Divide will give way to better radiational cooling to allow for colder temperatures. Western valleys will see near freezing to just below freezing temperatures near sunrise, but only touching it for less than hour not needing any cold temperatures hazards. The coldest spots will be the usual Upper Green River Basin from Pinedale to Bondurant. Beyond the temperatures, the next subtle mid-level trough will give way to some light snow above 10kft for western mountains, highest for the Tetons and SW Yellowstone of 2-3 inches (50-60%). Other parts of Yellowstone to the Gros Ventres and Winds could see an inch or so but lower confidence (30-40%). CAMs seem to be a bit bullish on these amounts with much of the impacted areas into MT, to include the Beartooth Pass.
Impacts east of the Divide will be of course wind, with the passing shortwave. Increasing gusts by mid-morning over 30 mph to peaking at over 50 mph by noon time. Highest wind speeds expected for the wind prone areas from eastern Sweetwater to Natrona Counties to include South Pass/Greens/Rattlesnakes/Casper Mountain that have a decent chance to breaking 60 mph (30-40%), but not worthy of any wind products for these higher elevations. Other areas of note will include the Cody/Lander Foothills pushing 50 to 55 mph that will keep an eye on to hit high wind criteria of 58mph (~10-15%). Winds will of course, decrease towards sunset Monday evening but remain elevated in these same areas through about midnight. Monday afternoon will also be the "coolest" day of the week, with 70s east of the Divide and 50s mainly to the west (Yellowstone down to the 40s, and even upper 30s for the northeastern part for Lamar Valley). The ample herds of Buffalo will welcome the reprieve of the heat.
Beyond Monday, expect a warming and mainly dry trend for the rest of the week and into the holiday weekend of America's 250th birthday celebration. The aforementioned upper level trough will fill with decreasing divergence aloft and push northeast. The West Coast will have another deepening L/W trough set up and remain with weak ridging to the east of the CWA. A few subtle shortwaves will push to the north and northeast of the area that will see some weak chances for northern mountains of the Absarokas and Bighorns (20-30%), but storm activity looks to be limited to the higher elevations with minimal accumulations expected. The other thing to keep an eye on will be increasing fire weather risk with warming temperatures/lower humidity values, but no significant wind looks to be forecasted beyond Monday. Independence Day and entire weekend looks to be a seasonable to just above seasonable day in terms of temperatures, with afternoon highs into the 80s east of the Divide and 70s to the west. Limited storm chances look to be confined to just the northern Bighorns, but stay tuned for any updated forecast changes in the coming days.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z WEDNESDAY/
Issued at 353 PM MDT Mon Jun 29 2026
Rain showers will continue into the early evening for KJAC, where low clouds and MVFR visibility has been reported recently. Precipitation is forecast to decrease and ultimately end before sunset, with clouds slowly clearing overnight.
Elsewhere, gusty west winds will continue through sunset. KCPR has seen gusts in the 50 kt range, with other locations seeing gusts in the 30 kt range. Expect winds to decrease quickly after sunset at all terminals.
Skies become more clear and winds will be lighter on Tuesday.
Please see the Aviation Weather Center and/or CWSU ZDV and ZLC for the latest information on smoke, icing and turbulence forecasts.
RIW WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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