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U.S. Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

   ZCZC SPCFWDDY1 ALL
   FNUS21 KWNS 260800

   Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0300 AM CDT Fri Jun 26 2026

   Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

   ...EXTREMELY CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR CENTRAL UTAH INTO
   NORTHWESTERN ARIZONA AND EXTREME SOUTHEASTERN NEVADA...
   ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR MUCH OF UTAH...EASTERN
   NEVADA...NORTHERN ARIZONA...SOUTHEASTERN WYOMING...AND FAR WESTERN
   COLORADO...

   ...Synopsis...
   Dangerous fire weather conditions are forecast across portions of
   the Great Basin and Southwest today as a robust fire weather pattern
   begins for an expansive portion of the Intermountain West. This
   pattern will bring exceptionally dry and windy conditions following
   antecedent dry thunderstorm activity over the past 1-2 days,
   resulting in significant fire weather concerns for any new
   ignitions, lingering holdovers, and ongoing large fires across the
   western CONUS.

   ...Northwestern Arizona and far southeastern Nevada into central
   Utah...
   A seasonably strong mid-level trough will dig into the western CONUS
   today, with an attendant mid-level jet overspreading portions of the
   Great Basin as upper-level ridging amplifies over the Great Plains.
   This will promote a deepening surface cyclone over the northern
   Great Basin, which will subsequently support a strong surface
   pressure gradient across much of the Intermountain West when
   combined with surface high pressure over New Mexico. Latest high-res
   guidance continues to depict a corridor of strong southwesterly
   winds (sustained 25-35 mph) developing amid very low RH values of
   5-15% from far southeastern Nevada and northwestern Arizona into
   central Utah. With very dry and receptive fuels across this region
   (ERCs in the 80-90+ percentiles) and ongoing large wildfire
   activity, these conditions will yield an extremely critical fire
   weather threat across this region. Deep boundary layer mixing
   coupled with the aforementioned mid-level jet will also promote wind
   gusts to 45 mph. A more expansive area of elevated to critical fire
   weather concerns is expected across adjacent areas of the Great
   Basin where modestly weaker sustained surface winds (generally 15-25
   mph) are forecast to overlap very low RH values of 5-20%. An
   extended period of critical wind/RH conditions (perhaps 10+ hours
   for some locations), poor overnight humidity recoveries, and
   residual gusty winds are forecast. Only minor adjustments were made
   to the drawn areas with this update to reflect the latest available
   guidance, and minor trimming was done on the northeastern extent of
   the Elevated highlights in central Wyoming to account for heavier
   rainfall on Thursday.

   ...Colorado Plateau...
   Increasing mid-level flow and ascent ahead of the approaching
   mid-level trough (coupled with dry boundary layer profiles and PWAT
   values of 0.5-0.8") will support the potential for isolated dry
   thunderstorms this afternoon from northwestern New Mexico into much
   of western Colorado. While storm motions are anticipated to be
   generally 20-30+ kts, pockets of heavier rainfall totals are
   possible, especially across northwestern New Mexico and southwestern
   Colorado where the latest guidance suggests PWAT contents and storm
   coverage may be locally greater. Thus, a mix of wet/dry
   thunderstorms is likely. Pockets of lingering receptive fuels (ERCs
   in the 80-90+ percentile) will continue to be receptive to lightning
   ignitions, however, and concerns regarding any lightning ignitions
   increase as multiple days of critical fire weather conditions are
   expected this weekend.

   ..Chalmers.. 06/26/2026
      

U.S. Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook


   ZCZC SPCFWDDY2 ALL
   FNUS22 KWNS 260802

   Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0302 AM CDT Fri Jun 26 2026

   Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

   ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF EASTERN
   NEVADA...NORTHERN ARIZONA...NORTHWESTERN NEW
   MEXICO...SOUTHERN/CENTRAL UTAH...SOUTHERN WYOMING...AND WESTERN
   COLORADO...

   ...Synopsis...
   A seasonably strong mid-level trough will continue to dig into the
   western CONUS on D2/Saturday, with an attendant mid-level jet
   overspreading much of the Upper Colorado River Basin. This will
   continue to support a robust fire weather pattern across an
   expansive portion of the Great Basin and Southwest through the
   weekend.

   ...Great Basin/Southwest...
   As the mid-level jet associated with the digging mid-level trough
   shifts eastward into the Upper Colorado River Valley, a corridor of
   stronger, sustained surface winds (25-30 mph) will expand from
   southeastern Nevada into the Colorado Plateau and overlap with very
   low RH values of 10-15%. Exacerbated by dry, windy conditions on
   D1/Friday, fuels will be very receptive, with ERCs already noted in
   the 80-90+ percentiles. These conditions will promote an extended
   period of critical fire weather conditions from southeastern Nevada
   into the Upper Colorado River Basin and southern Wyoming. Localized
   extremely critical wind/RH conditions are possible, particularly
   across southeastern Utah and perhaps into southwestern Colorado
   where latest high-res guidance suggests that the best overlap of
   sustained southwesterly winds approaching 30 mph and very low RH
   near 10% may occur. Pockets of fuels in this region are also noted
   to be at or above the 95th percentile. A broader area of elevated
   wind/RH conditions are expected across adjacent areas of the Great
   Basin/Southwest where sustained winds of 15-25 mph are forecast to
   overlap dry fuels and RH values of 10-20%.

   The primary change with this outlook was to expand the Critical
   highlights into north central Colorado based on the latest high-res
   guidance. Consideration was given to the addition of a targeted
   Extremely Critical area; however, some uncertainty remains regarding
   the duration of overlap between sustained winds exceeding 30 mph and
   RH values dropping below 10%. A portion of the Elevated highlights
   were also trimmed across central Wyoming and the foothills of
   northern Colorado owing to recent rainfall.

   ..Chalmers.. 06/26/2026


U.S. Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook


   ZCZC SPCFWDD38 ALL
   FNUS28 KWNS 252202

   Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0502 PM CDT Thu Jun 25 2026

   Valid 271200Z - 031200Z

   ...Synopsis...
   A robust fire weather pattern is expected to persist across an
   expansive portion of the Intermountain West through the middle of
   next week. Dry thunderstorms early in the forecast period followed
   by consecutive days of exceptionally dry and breezy conditions will
   promote significant fire weather concerns for any new ignitions,
   lightning holdovers, and ongoing large fires across the western
   CONUS.

   Forecast guidance continues to show a major, seasonally abnormal
   trough traversing the western CONUS through Day 4/Sunday, posing
   considerable fire weather concerns for the Great Basin and much of
   the Southwest. A strong cold front and accompanying wind shift (from
   broadly southwesterly to northerly) will push through the region
   sometime on Sunday. This wind shift and associated wind gusts may
   further exacerbate ongoing wildfires and impact control efforts.

   ...Days 3-4/Saturday-Sunday...
   A strong mid-level jet overspreads much of the Interior West as an
   upper trough amplifies across the Northwestern U.S., scouring out
   remaining meaningful atmospheric moisture in the Great Basin and
   Southwest. Forecast guidance suggests a corridor of stronger
   southwesterly winds of 25-35 mph developing under the stronger jet,
   expanding from southeastern NV into the CO Plateau on Day
   3/Saturday. Critical fire weather conditions will continue on Day
   4/Sunday as the mid-level jet translates slightly eastward,
   expanding from the Four Corners into the northern Plains. Of note,
   Day 4/Sunday may be a third consecutive day of amplified sustained
   winds of 25-35 mph across portions of the Great Basin. An extended
   burning period is expected, with consecutive days of poor overnight
   humidity recoveries and residual gusty winds further exacerbating
   the fire environment. The potential for localized extremely critical
   fire weather conditions may exist where single-digit RH and very
   strong sustained winds overlap receptive fuels.

   ...Days 5-6/Monday-Tuesday...
   Elevated southwesterly flow associated with persistent upper-level
   troughing across the West should support a prolonged fire weather
   threat across the central Rockies, Great Basin and parts of the
   Southwest. As such, 40% Critical probabilities have been maintained.
   Fuels are expected to remain quite receptive through the extended
   forecast period with minimal-to-no chances of precipitation this
   weekend into early next week. 

   A strong upper ridge is forecast to build over the central and
   eastern CONUS next week, maintaining a troughing pattern across the
   West. Above normal temperatures and overall drier conditions may
   encourage fire weather concerns to emerge in the Southeast. As dry
   southwesterly flow persists across the Southwest and Great Basin
   through the forecast period, Critical fire weather probabilities may
   be needed in future outlooks as guidance becomes better resolved.

   ..Elizalde-Garcia.. 06/25/2026
      




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