Douglas, Wyoming Weather Conditions
Severe Weather Alerts
Nowcast

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Now as of 10:40 PM MDT on May 23, 2012
Isolated showers and a few weak thunderstorms will gradually diminish across portions of east central Wyoming and the northern Nebraska Panhandle through midnight. Additional rainfall will be a few hundredths of an inch.
Next 12 Hours
5 Day Forecast
- Thursday
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- High: 61 °
- Low: 37 °
- Chance Rain
- Friday
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- High: 68 °
- Low: 46 °
- Chance of T-Storms
- Saturday
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- High: 79 °
- Low: 43 °
- T-Storms
- Sunday
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- High: 66 °
- Low: 41 °
- Partly Cloudy
- Monday
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- High: 73 °
- Low: 39 °
- Partly Cloudy
Forecast for Douglas, Wyoming
Updated: 9:00 PM MDT on May 23, 2012

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Wednesday
Overcast with a chance of a thunderstorm and rain showers. High of 73F. Winds from the WNW at 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 50%.

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Wednesday Night
Overcast with a chance of rain. Low of 30F. Winds from the NW at 5 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 50%.

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Thursday
Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow and rain showers, then a chance of rain in the afternoon. High of 61F. Winds from the NW at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation 50% .

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Thursday Night
Partly cloudy with a chance of rain. Low of 37F. Winds from the NE at 5 to 15 mph shifting to the ESE after midnight. Chance of rain 30%.

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Friday
Overcast with a chance of rain, then a chance of a thunderstorm and a chance of rain in the afternoon. High of 68F. Breezy. Winds from the ESE at 15 to 25 mph with gusts to 30 mph. Chance of rain 50%.

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Friday Night
Mostly cloudy with a chance of a thunderstorm and a chance of rain, then a chance of rain after midnight. Low of 46F. Breezy. Winds from the SE at 15 to 25 mph with gusts to 30 mph. Chance of rain 40%.

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Saturday
Overcast with rain showers, then thunderstorms and rain showers in the afternoon. High of 79F. Winds from the SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 30%.

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Saturday Night
Overcast with thunderstorms and a chance of rain, then a chance of rain after midnight. Low of 43F. Winds from the SSW at 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 40%.

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Sunday
Mostly cloudy in the morning, then partly cloudy. High of 66F. Windy. Winds from the WSW at 25 to 30 mph.

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Sunday Night
Partly cloudy in the evening, then mostly cloudy. Low of 41F. Winds from the WNW at 5 to 20 mph.

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Monday
Clear in the morning, then partly cloudy. High of 73F. Winds from the West at 10 to 15 mph.

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Monday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 39F. Winds from the North at 5 to 10 mph shifting to the ESE after midnight.

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Tuesday
Partly cloudy. High of 79F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Tuesday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 46F. Winds from the SSE at 5 to 10 mph.

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Wednesday
Clear with a chance of rain. High of 81F. Winds from the NNW at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Wednesday Night
Partly cloudy with a chance of rain. Low of 45F. Winds from the NE at 5 to 15 mph shifting to the SE after midnight. Chance of rain 30%.

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Thursday
Partly cloudy with a chance of a thunderstorm. High of 77F. Winds from the NE at 5 to 10 mph shifting to the NNW in the afternoon. Chance of rain 20%.

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Thursday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 48F. Winds from the NNW at 5 to 15 mph.

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Friday
Partly cloudy. High of 79F. Winds from the NW at 5 to 10 mph.

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Friday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 50F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Saturday
Clear. High of 82F. Winds from the West at 5 to 10 mph.

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Saturday Night
Clear. Low of 52F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Sunday
Clear. High of 82F. Winds from the West at 5 to 10 mph.

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Sunday Night
Clear. Low of 52F. Winds from the West at 5 to 10 mph.
Severe Weather Alert Descriptions
Record Report
Statement as of 1:43 am MDT on May 23, 2012
... Record high temperature set at Scottsbluff Nebraska Airport...
A record high temperature of 100 degrees was set at Scottsbluff
Nebraska Airport yesterday. This breaks the old record of 91 set in
1939.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: Converse County Flyers, Douglas, WY Updated: 11:49 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 44.2 °F | Dew Point: 40 °F | Humidity: 79% | Wind: NW at 10.7 mph | Pressure: 29.80 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.01 in | Windchill: 39 °F | Graphs |
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Location: HADS NORTH PLATTE RIVER NEAR GLEN ROC WY US, Glenrock, WY Updated: 10:30 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 47 °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: Calm | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.14 in | Windchill: 47 °F | Graphs |
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Location: APRSWXNET Bill WY US, Douglas, WY Updated: 11:12 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 46 °F | Dew Point: 43 °F | Humidity: 89% | Wind: NNW at 4 mph | Pressure: 29.47 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.12 in | Windchill: 44 °F | Graphs |
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MSN Maps of: |
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| Temp: | Dew Point: | Humidity | Wind | Pressure | Hr Precip | - | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Cheyenne Wyoming 1115 PM MDT Wednesday may 23 2012 Aviation...06z tafs Mainly VFR conditions expected next 24 hours. Could see some MVFR conditions with showers this afternoon...mainly across the northern Panhandle. Upsloping winds look to set in Thursday night that may lead to IFR and below conditions across the Panhandle and airports east of the Laramie range. Claycomb && Previous discussion... /issued 850 PM MDT Wednesday may 23 2012/ Update...water vapor imagery and 00z sounding data showed a long wave middle/upper level trough over the western Continental U.S. This evening. A 130-knots 300 mb jet extended from the eastern Pacific through the central Great Basin and central rockies... with northern Colorado and southern Wyoming on the left exit region. Upper level diffluence was enhancing large scale lift with widespread precipitation over much of the County warning forecast area. Marginal instability in the middle levels was contributing to convective nature of precipitation... with scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms across central and eastern Wyoming. More stratiform banding with embedded thunderstorms prevailed in region of middle level frontogenetical forcing over northern and northeast Colorado. Rainfall amounts thus far have generally been light... from a trace to around a tenth of an inch. Heavier/steadier rain with tenth to quarter inch south of I-80 corridor from east of Cheyenne to Sidney was indicated. Expect a gradual decrease in coverage and intensity of precipitation as the frontogenetical forcing shifts southeast with the upper level jet overnight. It will be cold enough for some light snow for the mountains as snow levels drop below 8500 feet. Accumulations will be minimal and confined to grassy surfaces. Based on radar trends...have raised probability of precipitation for extreme southeast portion of County warning forecast area and expanded the coverage of isolated thunderstorms this evening. Low temperature forecast generally on track. Previous discussion... /issued 332 PM MDT Wednesday may 23 2012/ Short term...tonight through Friday night... radar imagery is currently showing a band of light rain showers over portions of Laramie County and the southern Nebraska Panhandle. The models have done a good job at moving this band southeastward during the day along an axis of 700-500mb frontogenesis. The frontogenesis is prognosticated to be in northeastern Colorado by 00z. The GFS and NAM both show a quarter to one half inch of quantitative precipitation forecast just across the border in Weld County through tonight. Went with a tenth inch of quantitative precipitation forecast along the border...as the heaviest showers should remain south of the County Warning Area with the forcing. Thursday will be a cool day with 700mb temperatures around -3c and broad cyclonic westerly flow over the area. With the 300mb jet positioned over Colorado...the northern part of the County Warning Area will be in the left exit region through the afternoon. This will create enough lift for scattered showers mainly in that area. Cannot rule out some isolated thunderstorms with the cold middle level temperatures producing some weak instability. The models continue to show a strong middle level trough digging into the Great Basin on Thursday night and closing off over Nevada on Friday. The surface pressure falls over the Great Basin will result in increasing southeast winds on Friday...which will transport low level moisture into areas east of the Laramie range. High temperatures on Friday will be tricky over the plains due to the low level stratus that will likely develop in the moist upslope flow...however leaned toward the warmer GFS. The GFS...due to its warmer boundary layer...shows a narrow axis of 500-1000 j/kg of cape along and just east of the Laramie range on Friday afternoon. Should any storms develop...the favorable environmental shear profile could produce a few stronger storms. The storms would weaken as they move out of the instability axis and into a much more stable airmass over the plains. Expect a persistent stratus deck over the plains on Friday night...with some of the soundings indicating drizzle or light rain possible with deepening saturation in the low level. Long term...Saturday through Wednesday... a sharp and negatively tilted upper-level trough will dominate the western Continental U.S. Early in the extended period as a significant closed low lifts northeast through the Great Basin. Medium range model guidance continues to trend northward with the track of this feature...and the prospects of convective precipitation across our County Warning Area continue to diminish as a result. Nonetheless...strong southwest flow aloft and a strengthening surface low over northeast Colorado should continue to promote low-level moist advection over east central Wyoming and the northern NE Panhandle. This scenario along with steep middle- level lapse rates would result in sufficient instability in the presence of very strong deep layer vertical shear to support organized thunderstorm activity over those areas on Sat. A fire weather risk would exist over southeast Wyoming...where a middle-level dry slot is expected to lift rapidly northeast that afternoon. Beyond Saturday...dry west to northwesterly middle-level flow will tend to limit chances for showers and thunderstorms to the mountainous terrain. A few disturbances should traverse the flow toward the end of the period...resulting in additional chances for precipitation over the High Plains. However...no significant precipitation events appear to be in the offing. && Fire weather... no fire weather concerns through Friday as temperatures have cooled and relative humidities have risen behind the cold front that passed over the area last night. Scattered showers will continue over portions of Laramie County and the southern Nebraska Panhandle through early tonight. Dew points will increase on Friday especially for areas east of the Laramie range as southeasterly winds transport moisture into the area. There is the potential for elevated fire weather conditions to develop on Saturday afternoon mainly in areas near the Colorado border as increasing south winds produce a warmer and drier airmass. && Cys watches/warnings/advisories... Wyoming...none. NE...none. && $$ Short term/fire weather...Finch long term/aviation...hammer


