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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 230526
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1226 AM CDT Tue Jun 23 2026
Valid 231200Z - 241200Z
...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR NORTHERN ARIZONA AND SOUTHERN
UTAH...
...Synopsis...
Dry southwesterly to westerly flow under a building ridge aloft will
bring a broad fire weather concern to portions of the Southwest,
southern Great Basin and CO Plateau today. Hot temperatures combined
with dry air will drop RHs to 5-15% during peak heating across this
region this afternoon. This well-mixed boundary layer will transport
the aforementioned flow to the surface, leading to widespread
west-southwest winds of 10-15 mph over the Elevated area. To capture
the areal extent of this activity as indicated in the latest
forecast guidance, slight expansions were made to include additional
portions of central NV and southwestern WY. A corridor of enhanced
westerly winds up to 20 mph amid RH as low as 10% will yield a
period of critical fire weather conditions for parts of northern AZ
into southern UT. Persistently poor RH nighttime recoveries will
further exacerbate already very dry fuels and extend burn periods
well into the overnight hours.
While not likely, a thunderstorm or two cannot be completely ruled
out near Flagstaff, AZ. If any such storm does form, it will likely
provide more potential for wind than rain given the high cloud
bases, limited precipitable water, and very hot and dry surface
conditions in this area. Greater potential for thunderstorm activity
will exist on Day 2/Wednesday.
..Stearns.. 06/23/2026
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U.S. Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
ZCZC SPCFWDDY2 ALL
FNUS22 KWNS 230614
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0114 AM CDT Tue Jun 23 2026
Valid 241200Z - 251200Z
...Synopsis...
An embedded upper-level short wave trough and attendant plume of
mid/upper level sub-tropical moisture moves into the Southwest by
Day 2/Wednesday, bringing a dry thunderstorm threat to portions of
the Southwest and Four Corners region. Early in the day, convection
will likely be ongoing over portions of southwest UT before becoming
more widespread to include much of the larger Isolated Dry Thunder
area as daytime heating continues. The escalating precipitable water
values associated with this increasingly progressive moisture plume
will be watched closely with future forecast issuances given their
potential to dampen dry thunderstorm potential. However, given the
widespread critically dry fuels, preceding hot and dry surface
conditions before convection starts and the dry sub-cloud layer,
even if modeled precipitation amounts trend upward, a fire weather
threat will still exist from lightning ignitions across this region.
Wetter storms working to conceal potential ignitions followed by the
hot, dry, and very windy pattern change on the horizon later this
week for this region could become particularly concerning given the
propensity for lightning holdovers.
The Elevated wind/RH area over eastern NV was also slightly adjusted
commensurate with the latest forecast models depicting a corridor of
10-20 mph sustained south to southwesterly winds over this portion
of the western Great Basin where hot and dry (5-15%) conditions will
exist through the afternoon.
..Stearns.. 06/23/2026
U.S. Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
ZCZC SPCFWDD38 ALL
FNUS28 KWNS 222201
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0501 PM CDT Mon Jun 22 2026
Valid 241200Z - 301200Z
...Synopsis...
An embedded upper short wave and attendant plume of mid/upper level
sub-tropical moisture moves into the Southwest by Day 3/Wednesday,
bringing a dry thunderstorm threat to portions of the Southwest and
Four Corners region. Another embedded short wave translates eastward
into the Interior West by Day 4/Thursday maintaining dry
thunderstorm potential across CO Plateau and Four Corners. An
amplifying wave pattern emerges late in the week with strong and dry
southwest flow posing a broad and considerable fire weather concerns
for the eastern Great Basin and much of the Southwest Days
5-6/Friday-Saturday. Troughing across the West with a building ridge
over the eastern U.S. will likely sustain fire weather concerns for
much of the Southwest through early next week under enhanced
southwest flow and dry conditions.
...Days 3-4/Wednesday-Thursday...
An approaching short wave impulse and accompanying mid-level Pacific
moisture plume will likely bring a broad area of isolated high-based
convection to the Southwest, centered around the Four Corners region
on Day 3/Wednesday. Another upper-level wave edges towards the
Northern Rockies in Day 4/Thursday, aiding in isolated thunderstorm
development across the greater Four Corners region. New ignitions
are possible with receptive fuels in place and limited surface
precipitation attributed to a dry, sub-cloud layer supportive of
evaporation. Additionally, drier southwest flow, west of the deeper
Pacific moisture, will yield a fire weather threat to the eastern
Great Basin both Wednesday and Thursday. A 40% critical probability
area was added to eastern NV and west-central UT in addition to
general expansion of the 10% isolated dry thunderstorm probability
areas.
...Day 5-6/Friday-Saturday...
A unseasonable strong mid-level jet overspreads much of the Interior
West late this week as an upper trough amplifies across the
Northwestern U.S., scouring out remaining meaningful atmospheric
moisture across the Southwest. Latest forecast guidance suggests a
corridor of stronger southwest winds of 25-35 mph developing under
the stronger jet across the southern Great Basin into northern AZ on
Day 5/Friday, shifting into southeastern UT and the CO Western Slope
by Saturday. Primary changes for this outlook were the inclusion of
70% critical probability areas for both Friday and Saturday as
confidence continues to increase in a appreciable wind event,
potentially impacting nascent wildfires born from thunderstorm
activity on Wednesday and Thursday.
...Days 7-8/Sunday-Monday...
Elevated southwesterly flow associated with persistent upper-level
troughing across the West should support a prolonged fire weather
threat across the CO Plateau, Four Corners and parts of the
Southwest through early next week. As such, 40% critical
probabilities have been added for Day 8/Monday given increasing
forecast confidence in longer term ensemble guidance. Fuels are
expected to remain quite receptive through early next week with only
some reprieve in isolated areas that receive appreciable rainfall in
the days 3-4/Wednesday-Thursday time frame.
..Williams.. 06/22/2026
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