Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Boise, ID
Issued by NWS Boise, ID
290 FXUS65 KBOI 182146 AFDBOI Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Boise ID 246 PM MST Tue Nov 18 2025 .SHORT TERM...Tonight through Thursday night...We remain under an area of weak flow aloft sandwiched between a low over southern CA and another along the US/Canada border. This northern system will hold the most potential impact for our weather over the next 24hr as it drags a weak front across the area. The front will bring a 20-40% chance of showers to the e-central Oregon and w-central Idaho mtns on Wednesday and enough wind to portions of SE Oregon to combat the development of fog/stratus. Further east and south, the front is expected to have little impact near the surface which will favor redevelopment of fog and stratus tonight into Wednesday. Given the stubbornness the fog/stratus has shown today, have leaned into the HRRR and NAMnest solutions for tonight into Wednesday regarding timing and coverage of low cloud cover. Expect to see a mix of fog/stratus from Harney/Malheur counties through the Snake Plain to Twin/Jerome. Not confident enough on the form and coverage to issue any highlights for dense fog, but wouldn`t be surprised if one is needed for Wednesday morning. Above the valleys mid-high clouds will accompany the weak front and mtn showers. Another wave will push onto the coast late Wednesday, extending into our region on Thursday. Not confident on what fog/stratus will do Wednesday night but the lowest elevations stand the best chance at seeing it return (if it does in fact erode on Wednesday). This next system will bring a more widespread 20-30% chance of precipitation to SE Oregon and the SW Idaho Thursday, though any amounts will be light (most locations <0.10"). Snow levels through the period will remain between 6-8kft so what little does fall will be limited to the higher peaks. .LONG TERM...Friday through Tuesday...A ridge builds in from the west as a closed low moves over southern California, this will allow for a mostly zonal flow to keep temps moderated through Monday at about 5-10 degrees above normal. During this period, mixing heights have a daily maximum of around 2-3 kft MSL, lowest on Friday and Saturday. This could allow a weak inversion to develop, while supporting morning fog. A broad trough moves in from Alaska Monday evening, bringing a 20-40% chance of precipitation to the north and cooling temperatures down to normal on Tuesday. Models seem less confident in the precipitation than previous runs, but the trough is consistent so a cooldown is likely. && .AVIATION...LIFR-IFR in fog hanging on for longer than expected. Some improvement is still expected this afternoon as ceilings and visibilities have continued to slowly climb. With a similar environment tonight/tomorrow morning fog/stratus is likely again, with widespread reductions back to LIFR-IFR. Surface winds: light and variable. Winds aloft at 10kft MSL: S 5-15kt. KBOI...Low clouds bringing IFR-MVFR conditions are still expected to clear this afternoon as ceilings slowly climb. A period of MVFR-VFR this afternoon won`t last too long before fog/stratus is favored to form again tonight through the morning. Surface winds: light and variable. && .AIR STAGNATION...Forecasts keep conditions borderline in regards to a prolonged stagnant air mass setting up. Mixing heights of 1800-2500 feet AGL and light winds are expected through Friday. The weekend will see a low-amplitude ridge which will keep dry and stable conditions in place. Expect fog and stratus to be in play through at least Wednesday with a system on Thursday possibly breaking it up, especially in the Snake Plain which gets into easterly winds. && .BOI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ID...None. OR...None. && $$ www.weather.gov/Boise Interact with us via social media: www.facebook.com/NWSBoise www.x.com/NWSBoise SHORT TERM...DG LONG TERM....JM AVIATION.....JM AIR STAGNATION...DG