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U.S. & Canada 00-UTC 48 Hour Surface Smoke Forecast
Map is in operation from early April through October 31
U.S. Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
ZCZC SPCFWDDY1 ALL
FNUS21 KWNS 101606
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1106 AM CDT Sun May 10 2026
Valid 101700Z - 111200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes for this forecast update. Limited overlap of dry and
breezy conditions with receptive fuels across CONUS will mitigate
broader fire weather threats for today.
..Williams.. 05/10/2026
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0158 AM CDT Sun May 10 2026/
...Synopsis...
A large-scale ridge over the West will promote warm and dry
conditions across much of the Southwest and Great Basin on Sunday.
Outside of localized terrain-favored areas, light surface winds will
limit fire-weather concerns.
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U.S. Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
ZCZC SPCFWDDY2 ALL
FNUS22 KWNS 101936
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0236 PM CDT Sun May 10 2026
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PARTS OF EASTERN MONTANA INTO
WEST-CENTRAL NORTH DAKOTA...
...Portions of the Northern and Central Plains...
No significant changes to the outlook were made. A mid-level short
wave and attendant 60-70 knot jet max enters the northern High
Plains Sunday. At the surface, a deepening lee surface trough and
evolving cold front will translate eastward into Upper Midwest by
early Tuesday morning. A well mixed boundary layer collocated with
stronger flow aloft will support a corridor of stronger
west-northwest winds of 20-25 mph across northeastern MT and western
ND. These winds aligned with RH minima of 15-25% will support
critical fire weather conditions amid very dry fuels. Elevated fire
weather concerns including wind speeds approaching 20 mph from the
west/northwest will exist across much of the High Plains of Montana
into western ND surrounding the higher magnitude wind corridor.
There is a potential for elevated convection across northern ND as
the surface trough and cold front push into Northern Plains,
although expected cloud cover could inhibit broader destabilization
and thus lightning production.
South of the cold front, downslope enhanced drying amid deep layer
westerly flow will affect portions of western SD and northern NE.
West winds of around 15 mph and RH as low as 10% will promote
several hours of elevated fire weather conditions amid receptive
fuels Monday.
..Williams.. 05/10/2026
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0202 AM CDT Sun May 10 2026/
...Synopsis...
Along the northern periphery of an expansive upper ridge over the
West, a robust midlevel trough and accompanying 60-70-kt jet streak
will advance eastward across MT into ND during peak heating. At the
same time, a related surface low will move eastward from SK into MB
Canada, while a southward-extending lee trough deepens along the
northern/central Plains -- before being overtaken by a surface
front. This large-scale pattern will favor a broad area of elevated
conditions across parts of the northern and central Plains during
the afternoon, with critical conditions expected over eastern MT
into west-central ND.
...Northern into the Central Plains...
Ample diurnal heating and downslope flow trajectories will promote
deep boundary-layer mixing along and west of the lee trough during
the afternoon, where upper 70s to lower/middle 80s temperatures and
15-25 percent RH are expected. Over the northern Plains, a
combination of a tight pressure gradient and strong deep-layer
west-northwesterly flow will promote 20-25 mph sustained
west-northwesterly surface winds (with higher gusts) amid 20-25
percent RH. The greatest overlap of strong surface winds and low RH
atop critically receptive fuels is expected from eastern MT into
west-central ND -- where Critical highlights are in place. Farther
south, a slightly weaker pressure gradient and moderate flow aloft
will favor 15 mph sustained west-southwesterly surface winds, with
10-15 percent RH. Given receptive fuels here as well, elevated to
locally critical conditions are expected. A north-northwesterly wind
shift is expected during the evening behind the front, with
increasing RH and cooling temperatures.
U.S. Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
ZCZC SPCFWDD38 ALL
FNUS28 KWNS 102159
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0459 PM CDT Sun May 10 2026
Valid 121200Z - 181200Z
...Synopsis...
A more active upper-level wave pattern emerges later this week
across the CONUS. The upper ridge responsible for near record
setting heat early this week will shift into the central U.S. by
Thursday, saddled by an amplifying trough across the eastern U.S.
and another trough moving into the western states Days
4-5/Wednesday-Thursday, the latter of which will bring broader fire
weather concerns to a drying fuelscape across the West. Forecast
uncertainty increases as the weekend approaches with a more diffuse,
perhaps zonal, pattern returning to the CONUS.
...Day 3/Tuesday - Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...
Dry, post-frontal flow in the wake of a deep surface low across the
Great Lakes will bring a fire weather threat to portions of the
Northern Plains and Upper Midwest where frontal precipitation is
minimized and critically dry fuels remain. RH reductions will be
limited to 20-30% but northwest winds of 15-25 mph over receptive
fuels, supports a continuation (and slight expansion based on latest
model guidance) of 40% critical probabilities across the region.
...Day 4/Wednesday...
...Southern Great Basin and Southwest...
Fire weather concerns increase across portions of the Southwest and
Great Basin ahead of an advancing upper trough and attendant
increasing southwest flow aloft. Advection of mid and upper level
Pacific moisture and supportive kinematic environment should support
some high-based showers and thunderstorms across much of the
Intermountain West on Day 4/Wednesday. A 10% probability area for
dry thunderstorms has been introduced where fuels are expected to be
driest, reaching the 90th percentile by midweek under a few days of
abnormally warm temperatures. Farther west, drier southwest flow
should impact much of the eastern Great Basin and upper CO River
Basin regions allowing for a heightened fire weather concern under a
drying/curing fuelscape. A slight expansion of existing 40% critical
probabilities has been made into the AZ Strip area.
...Northeastern Montana...
A deepening surface low in the lee of the Northern Rockies will
promote stronger southerly flow over the northern High Plains on Day
4/Wednesday. Existing dry fuels amid a southerly dry return flow
will combine to bring enhanced fire weather concerns to northeastern
MT, where 40% critical probabilities have been introduced.
..Williams.. 05/10/2026
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