Iberlin Strip, Wyoming Weather Conditions
Severe Weather Alerts
Next 12 Hours
5 Day Forecast
- Thursday
-
- High: 57 °
- Low: 37 °
- T-Storms
- Friday
-
- High: 52 °
- Low: 43 °
- T-Storms
- Saturday
-
- High: 73 °
- Low: 43 °
- T-Storms
- Sunday
-
- High: 61 °
- Low: 45 °
- Mostly Cloudy
- Monday
-
- High: 66 °
- Low: 45 °
- Partly Cloudy
Forecast for Iberlin Strip, Wyoming
Updated: 9:00 PM MDT on May 23, 2012

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Wednesday
Partly cloudy with rain showers in the morning, then mostly cloudy with thunderstorms and rain showers. High of 63F. Winds from the NW at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30%.

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Wednesday Night
Mostly cloudy with rain showers. Low of 39F. Breezy. Winds from the NW at 10 to 25 mph with gusts to 30 mph. Chance of rain 30%.

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Thursday
Mostly cloudy with rain showers, then thunderstorms and a chance of rain in the afternoon. High of 57F. Winds from the NNW at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 40%.

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Thursday Night
Partly cloudy with thunderstorms and a chance of rain, then a chance of snow and a chance of rain after midnight. Low of 37F. Winds from the North at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation 20% .

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Friday
Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain, then thunderstorms and a chance of rain in the afternoon. High of 52F. Winds from the NE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 60%.

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Friday Night
Mostly cloudy with thunderstorms and rain showers, then rain showers after midnight. Low of 43F. Winds from the ENE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 60% with rainfall amounts near 0.3 in. possible.

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Saturday
Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain, then thunderstorms and a chance of rain in the afternoon. High of 73F. Winds from the SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 40%.

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Saturday Night
Mostly cloudy with thunderstorms and a chance of rain in the evening, then overcast. Fog overnight. Low of 43F. Breezy. Winds from the SSW at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Sunday
Overcast. Fog early. High of 61F. Winds from the NW at 5 to 15 mph.

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Sunday Night
Overcast in the evening, then partly cloudy. Low of 45F. Winds from the NNW at 10 to 15 mph shifting to the West after midnight.

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Monday
Partly cloudy. Fog early. High of 66F. Winds from the WNW at 5 to 10 mph.

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Monday Night
Clear. Low of 45F. Winds from the NE at 5 to 15 mph.

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Tuesday
Partly cloudy. High of 73F. Winds from the South at 5 to 15 mph.

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Tuesday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 52F. Winds from the SE at 10 to 15 mph.

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Wednesday
Mostly cloudy. High of 68F. Breezy. Winds from the NNW at 15 to 20 mph.

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Wednesday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 50F. Winds from the North at 5 to 15 mph shifting to the WSW after midnight.

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Thursday
Partly cloudy. High of 66F. Winds from the West at 5 to 10 mph shifting to the NNW in the afternoon.

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Thursday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 52F. Winds from the North at 5 to 15 mph.

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Friday
Partly cloudy. High of 72F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Friday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 55F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Saturday
Clear. High of 73F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Saturday Night
Partly cloudy with a chance of a thunderstorm. Low of 55F. Winds less than 5 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Sunday
Clear. High of 73F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Sunday Night
Clear. Low of 55F. Winds less than 5 mph.
Severe Weather Alert Descriptions
Special Weather Statement
Statement as of 3:25 PM MDT on May 23, 2012
... A major change to colder and unsettled weather through Sunday...
A much cooler air mass will work into the area tonight into much of
Friday. A major storm system may take shape Friday through Saturday
as a large low pressure system strengthens over the Great Basin
leading to the possibility of valley rain and mountain snowfall.
It will remain cool and unsettled in the northern mountains today
and Thursday with periods of light rain at the lowest elevations with
some occasional light snow in the mountains. Expect a cool
day east of The Divide on Thursday with a scattering of showers and
isolated afternoon thunderstorms across most of the area.
By Friday... the potential for a significant storm system may start
to affect areas east of The Divide. Areas of rain may
develop over the northern and central basins with wet snow in the
nearby foothills and mountains... especially from midday on. Some
light to locally moderate snow will continue in Yellowstone National
Park... the absarokas and bighorns. Some heavier snow is possible in
the northwest mountains Friday night and Saturday... especially The
Tetons northward into western Yellowstone Park in areas above 8000 to
8500 feet.
The storm system is then expected to gradually lift northward into
Montana Saturday night and Sunday. Cold Valley rain and mountain
snow will continue across the northern mountains... including
Yellowstone National Park through Saturday. Temperatures will start
to recover on Sunday in the northern mountains but it will still
remain quite unsettled in Yellowstone National Park on Sunday with
light valley rain and higher elevation snow showers.
Memorial Day looks much drier with more seasonable temperatures.
Travellers and those with outdoor plans should monitor the latest
forecasts from the National Weather Service on this expected major
change to colder and unsettled weather. Significant snowfall may
accumulate in the central and northern mountains during this
timeframe. The latest forecast can be found at
www.Weather.Gov/Riverton.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: WYDOT Indian Creek Rd, Buffalo, WY Updated: 11:20 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 46 °F | Dew Point: 35 °F | Humidity: 65% | Wind: NW at 16 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 39 °F | Graphs |
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Location: WYDOT Pine Tree Junction, Wright, WY Updated: 11:25 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 42 °F | Dew Point: 42 °F | Humidity: 98% | Wind: West at 7 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 38 °F | Graphs |
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Location: WYDOT Belle Fourche US 59 south of Gillette, Wright, WY Updated: 11:25 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 46 °F | Dew Point: 46 °F | Humidity: 97% | Wind: West at 6 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 43 °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...corrected for time National Weather Service Riverton Wyoming 1135 PM MDT Wednesday may 23 2012 Short term...Wednesday night through Saturday Quite an active pattern over the next three days along with much mashing of teeth as many of the details remain difficult to nail down. Some showers and thunderstorms have been firing along a boundary across the southern Big Horn basin across into northern Natrona County. We expect this boundary to slowly sag southward into tonight to a position near the Wind River mountains to near Casper Mountain. Here is lies the first forecast quandary. As weak low pressure tries to develop near the Montana-Colorado-Nebraska border...middle level flow will northerly and set up an upslope flow situation across the favored locations such as Casper Mountain and the Wind River Range. Models are showing a bullseye of precipitation over eastern Wyoming with as much as 0.40 inches tonight near Casper. We think this is overdone...but we have bumped up probability of precipitation a bit as well as quantitative precipitation forecast. The next problem is what precipitation type...models show wet bulb zero levels falling to between 6000 and 6500 feet later tonight. So...it appears the S-word will re-enter the forecast for places like Casper Mountain and the Lander foothills. Accumulations appear to remain light at this time due to very warm ground temperatures. However...the next shift will have to monitor this closely as if any heavy snow does set up it could bring the snow down to as low as 5000 to 5500 for a time later tonight so have added the possibility of some snow for places like Casper later tonight. The steady precipitation looks to shift out of the area for Thursday as flow turns more westerly. On Thursday...some models..especially the NAM...have trended drier. So we cut back probability of precipitation a bit although left the general idea of showers across the northern two thirds of the area with most areas south of the green and rattlesnake ranges mainly dry. Temperatures look to be below average across the entire area with almost all areas remaining in the 50s or below for high temperatures. Could be quite a contrast across the area for temperatures on Friday with the boundary stating to lift northward across the state. Temperatures should rise into the 70s across southern areas with areas from around the Wind River Range and northward remaining in the cool air with highs in the 50s and even 40s with more cloud cover. The best moisture has been trending further north so we cut probability of precipitation a bit...especially in the morning as models have trended a bit slower with the system. However...given the travel expected for the Holiday weekend we have keep at least chance probability of precipitation for most areas. As for Friday night and Saturday as the main system moves in from the south and west...most models have been trending the bulk of the dynamics and moisture northward into Montana. Models have also been bringing most areas into the warm sector of the storm so we raised temperatures for Saturday and future shifts will likely have to raise them some more if the trend continues. As a result snow levels should continue to rise through Friday night and into Saturday with the broad southerly flow developing. Of course...this is dependent on how much of the area breaks into the warm sector. Models continue to show a good amount of moisture over the western areas...especially the northwest so it looks like a soggy start to the Memorial Day weekend for those locations. East of The Divide...expect a windy day with a scattering of afternoon showers and thunderstorms developing ahead of the advancing low. Long term...Saturday night through Wednesday night Medium range models remain in agreement for the most part today for the extended period. The European model (ecmwf) and Canadian are the slower models...keeping the storm center over western Montana Sunday and gradually moving into southern Saskatchewan by Monday morning. The GFS is the fastest...ejecting the system into southern Manitoba during the same time. The impacts to the cowboy state will be the same...with the cold front exiting the state late Sunday morning. Moist northwest flow will mainly impact western areas through early Monday...before a short wave ridge builds in the wake of the storm. The rest of the period will be somewhat unsettled...especially across western and northern portions...as zonal flow sets up and brings weak shortwaves across the area. && Aviation.../06z issuance/ Rain will continue over Natrona County through 12z with some MVFR conditions at the kcpr Airport. Conditions will improve by 15z in this area with VFR prevailing. Elsewhere isolated showers will occur through 12z with some snow showers in the far West Mountains. This activity will dissipate around 12z. Widely scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms will reform over the region after 18z Thursday. This activity will end by 03z Friday. VFR conditions will prevail with local MVFR conditions in thunderstorms. && Fire weather... Fire danger should be somewhat reduced through Thursday night as a boundary drops slowly southward through Wyoming and brings cooler temperatures...somewhat higher humidity...cooler temperatures and a chance of showers. There will be a chance of showers across much of the area with the most numerous coverage across areas west of The Divide and the Big Horn Mountains. Fire danger may increase somewhat on Friday and Saturday in Sweetwater County with warmer temperatures and a gusty wind. && Riw watches/warnings/advisories...none. && $$ Short term...hattings long term...lavoie aviation...Arkansas fire weather...hattings


