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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 021552
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1052 AM CDT Tue Jun 02 2026
Valid 021700Z - 031200Z
No changes were made to the areal extent of the existing Isolated
Dry Thunder highlight. Precipitable water amounts near 1/2 inch
across the drawn area amid a relatively dry near-surface atmospheric
layer and established drought. As was previously mentioned, a mix of
dry and wet thunderstorms will be possible as the moisture gradient
increases from the north/west to south/east. However, with a slight
trend toward warming, drying, and increased surface wind expected
later this week over the region, the potential for hold over
ignitions will exist.
..Stearns.. 06/02/2026
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1232 AM CDT Tue Jun 02 2026/
...Synopsis...
Weak and diffuse upper-level troughing will be over the Southwest,
with moisture aloft increasing along/east of the Divide in New
Mexico and along portions of the Arizona/New Mexico and New
Mexico-Colorado borders. PWAT values will increase to 0.4-0.6"
across western New Mexico and into far eastern Arizona and southern
Colorado, but surface dewpoints are likely to remain below 40F and
mostly 20-30F. Deep, well-mixed inverted-V soundings are expected
with high cloud bases of 10,000-13,000 feet AGL, with minimum RH of
10-20%. Weaker steering flow (5-15 knots) and deep, dry sub-cloud
layers may create a mix of wet/dry thunderstorms, and storms will be
wetter farther east as coverage and moisture increases. Overall,
forcing for ascent aloft and enough buoyancy should produce isolated
mostly dry thunderstorms over dry fuels (ERCs 80-95th percentile) in
western New Mexico/vicinity.
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U.S. Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
ZCZC SPCFWDDY2 ALL
FNUS22 KWNS 021828
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0128 PM CDT Tue Jun 02 2026
Valid 031200Z - 041200Z
An Elevated area was introduced over far southwest ID and much of
northeast NV. The latest forecast guidance has moved the exit region
of a jet streak, associated with the aforementioned upper-level
trough, slightly farther east on Day 2/Wednesday afternoon. This
will lead to stronger winds (sustained near 15-20 mph at the
surface) over the drawn area combined with well above normal
temperatures and resultant RHs down to 10-15% during peak heating
also allowing for a well-mixed boundary layer. While some green-up
is in place over the area, enough continuity of very dry fuels
coincident with the previously mentioned weather conditions will
exist to warrant a small Elevated fire risk over this portion of the
western Great Basin.
..Stearns.. 06/02/2026
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1234 AM CDT Tue Jun 02 2026/
...Synopsis...
Weak and diffuse upper-level troughing will continue over the
Southwest, with an upper-level trough moving into the northwestern
US. Winds will increase across much of western/northern Nevada into
southern Idaho ahead of the upper-level trough and associated dry
cold front and overlap a dry airmass. Elevated to locally critical
winds/RH are likely across these areas, but recent rainfall should
mitigate fire weather concerns, with this acting as more of a curing
event.
Isolated to scattered mixed wet/dry thunderstorms are likely again
across portions of far eastern Arizona into western New Mexico and
southern Colorado. Storms east of the Divide will be mostly wet with
drier storms along/west of the Divide. However, given the weak
steering flow, storms are likely to linger longer over areas,
especially on the higher terrain. Additionally, slightly deeper
moisture may work its way into portions of eastern Arizona,
especially southeast Arizona, which would also limit the potential
for drier thunderstorms. Fuels remain dry, but some areas will have
a second consecutive day of thunderstorms, which may help limit
ignition potential.
The upper-level ridge will begin to flatten over the Upper Midwest
and Great Lakes, but the stronger winds will be displaced from the
lowest RH. Regardless, fuels remain very dry across these areas
(90th+ percentile) amid above normal temperatures and pockets of RH
below elevated criteria.
U.S. Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
ZCZC SPCFWDD38 ALL
FNUS28 KWNS 022151
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0451 PM CDT Tue Jun 02 2026
Valid 041200Z - 101200Z
...Synopsis...
An upper level shortwave over the Canadian border will continue an
eastward progression on Day 3/Thursday with otherwise weak flow over
the southern half of the CONUS. A more significant trough over the
northern Pacific will approach the west coast on Day 4/Friday,
leading to increased winds across the Pacific Northwest and adjacent
areas. This system continues to move through the northwestern CONUS
on Day 5/Saturday before lifting northeast on Day 6/Sunday. In the
wake of this trough, a cold front is anticipated to spread across
the Pacific Northwest and into the northern Great Basin, temporarily
dropping daytime temperatures below normals over the western third
of the US.
...Portions of the Southwest and Great Basin...
...Day 4-6/Friday-Sunday...
Increasing southwesterly mid-level flow ahead of the approaching
upper-level trough will encourage a dry and breezy environment to
emerge across the Great Basin and Southwest by Day 4/Friday. 40%
Critical probabilities have been introduced where extended guidance
and ensemble probabilities denote a broad area of low RH and strong
winds. This potential will become more widespread and expand farther
east on Day 5/Saturday and continue on Day 6/Sunday as the
upper-level trough progresses. Higher probabilities will likely be
needed if model trends continue to hold past Day 4/Friday.
..Stearns.. 06/02/2026
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