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

- Isolated to scattered rain showers and thunderstorms continue this evening ending by midnight. Gusty outflow winds 30 to 50 mph are the main hazard with any shower or storm.

- Rain showers return early Tuesday morning, mainly west of the Continental Divide.

- Increased moisture brings better chances of showers and thunderstorms Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. Strong winds are the main hazard with these storms.

- A fairly stagnant weather pattern keeps above normal temperatures much of the week, with daily chances of afternoon showers and thunderstorms.

UPDATE

Issued at 1234 PM MDT Mon May 25 2026

A warm Memorial Day, with highs in the mid-to-upper 70s west of the Divide and 80s east of the Divide. A few spots in the Bighorn Basin could also hit the 90 degree mark. For reference, normal highs are in the upper 60s to low 70s for the end of May. Similar to yesterday, showers and thunderstorms will be possible this afternoon, diminishing between sunset and about 10pm. Most convection today will be along and west of the Divide, though some activity makes it east, most likely for the Bighorn and Wind River Basins. Also like yesterday, outflow winds 30 to 50 mph are the biggest concern with any shower or storm. Those recreating outside this holiday weekend should be aware of these possible sudden winds.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 114 AM MDT Mon May 25 2026

The overall theme of the forecast remains largely the same as this time yesterday. Things are largely quiet at this time around western and central Wyoming. And the main players in the forecast remain the same, an approaching upper level low that will move onshore in the Pacific Northwest today and a ridge that will build across the Plains states for much of the week. And their positions will have the main influence on our weather each day, as we will likely be between the two of them.

As for today, the axis of the most showers and storms should shift to western Wyoming. Dew points should run around 5 to 10 degrees above yesterday and CAPE is maximized in this location, with up to 1000 J/Kg. We did increase POPS here somewhat, but the chance of any location seeing a shower or thunderstorm generally ranges from 1 out of 5 in the lower elevations to up to 2 out of 5 in the mountains. Most thunderstorms should be of the run of mill variety, although a stronger storm or two can't be ruled out. There is more of a question East of the Divide, where the lower atmosphere will be drier, and southwest flow should bring some downsloping flow. We did bump POPs up a bit, with the best chance across northern Wyoming, where the atmosphere is a bit more unstable, especially the Cody Foothills. Most of any activity in this area would likely be near the mountains, and the chance is generally lower than 1 out of 3. We can't rule a shower out anywhere, but elsewhere the chance is less than 1 out of 10. Southwest flow will bring a warm day as well, with temperatures running around 10 degrees above normal, and maybe a few 90s in the Bighorn Basin. Like previous days, activity will be largely diurnal and most will end shortly after sunset.

Things may get a bit more active tomorrow. The upper level low will be onshore by this time and the first shortwave will be moving across the area from south to north. Low level flow will also be turning more to the south and east, bringing in more low level moisture. Precipitable water rise somewhat as well, to as high as an inch in eastern portions of the area, which is greater than 175 percent of normal and above the 90th percentile with climatology. One limiting factor may be cloud cover though, as this may limit instability. The two most likely zones look to again be the western mountains, where CAPE values climb to higher than 1000 J/Kg and lifted indices fall to minus 3. The other is across Johnson and Natrona Counties, where upslope may bringing convective initiation against the Bighorns. As for stronger storms, the best chance of that would be in western Wyoming where there is more directional shear present. Locally heavy rain is possible with any storm put there will be around 20 knots of storm motion, so this should limit any flooding potential. Storm chances range from around 1 out of 2 in the western mountains to less than 1 out 6 in portions of the Bighorn and Wind River Basins where the least activity will be found. Again, most activity should end after sunset, but a few showers may linger through the night.

Uncertainty increases after this, as the guidance continues to struggle with the evolution of the movement of the upper level low. However, there has been a trend in the ridge being a bit stronger and keeping the low further to the west. This would mean a somewhat drier and warmer forecast. The forecast for Wednesday is likely the wettest it could be. The most active days may end up bring Friday or Saturday, but again a lot depends on the track of the low and how the trough axis moves as the low eventually opens up. The trend for now is for continued above normal temperatures and some chances of convection each day, with the best chance in western Wyoming. Determining which day will be the most active and where the heavier rain falls remains uncertain. We may also have to deal with some rising creeks, streams and rivers as the warm spell may be able to melt out some of the higher level snowpack.

AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z WEDNESDAY/

Issued at 953 PM MDT Mon May 25 2026

SOUTHERLY FLOW WILL CONTINUE TO BRING IN MOISTURE TO THE AREA OVER THE NEXT 24 HOURS. THIS WILL KEEP ISOLATED SHOWERS IN THE AREA TONIGHT AND RESULT IN SCATTERED SHOWERS AND STORMS TUESDAY AFTERNOON INTO TUESDAY EVENING. CONDITIONS WILL PREDOMINANTLY REMAIN VFR THROUGH THE TAF PERIOD, BUT MAY DROP TO MVFR/IFR IN THE STRONGEST SHOWERS AND STORMS TUESDAY AFTERNOON INTO TUESDAY EVENING. AN AREA OF RAIN, AND POSSIBLY A STORM, WILL MOVE INTO SOUTHWEST WYOMING EARLY TUESDAY MORNING AND PUSH NORTH THROUGH TUESDAY MORNING. RAIN IS POSSIBLE (15-25%) AT KBPI, KPNA, AND KJAC WITH THIS AREA OF RAIN TUESDAY MORNING. WIDESPREAD CLOUD COVER TUESDAY MORNING MAY KEEP CONVECTION FROM DEVELOPING UNTIL MID-AFTERNOON TUESDAY, WHICH WOULD ALLOW FOR CONVECTION TO SURVIVE WELL INTO TUESDAY EVENING. TERMINALS WITH THE BEST CHANCE FOR RAIN AND THUNDERSTORMS HAVE PROB30 GROUPS AT THIS TIME, BUT PREVAILING GROUPS MAY BE NECESSARY WITH THE NEXT COUPLE OF TAF ISSUANCES.

WIND WILL LIGHT TONIGHT, WELL BELOW 10 KNOTS, BUT WILL INCREASE TUESDAY MORNING INTO TUESDAY AFTERNOON. WIND WILL BE FROM THE SOUTH AND WILL AVERAGE 10-15 KNOTS, WITH GUSTS OF 15-25 KNOTS AT MOST TERMINALS TUESDAY AFTERNOON. TYPICAL STRONGER GUSTS CAN BE EXPECTED WITH CONVECTIVE ACTIVITY.

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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