Tomorrow is forecast to be Much Cooler than today.
Nowcast as of 3:56 PM MST on November 14, 2009
Now
Through late afternoon scattered to isolated rain showers and high terrain snow showers will continue to stream northeastward across central and western New Mexico. Isolated thunderstorms are also possible near the Colorado border. The snow level will vary around 8500 feet. Through 600 PM additional snow accumulations may reach 1 inch above 9000 feet in parts of the northern...western and central mountains. On mountain passes heavier snow showers will drop visibility below one half mile at times and roadways may become slick.
Partly cloudy. Chance of rain showers in the evening... then scattered rain and snow showers after midnight. Lows in the upper 20s to mid 30s. West winds 10 to 20 mph in the evening.
Sunday
Breezy. Partly cloudy with scattered rain and snow showers. Snow accumulation around 1 inch. Highs in the lower to mid 40s. West winds 10 to 20 mph increasing to northwest 15 to 25 mph in the afternoon.
There are currently no warnings or advisories for this location.
Public Information Statement
Statement as of 10:52 am MST on November 14, 2009
... NOAA Weather Radio remains out of service across northern and central New Mexico...
Multiple communication and hardware failures Thursday morning caused a NOAA Weather Radio outage throughout northern and central New Mexico. Since then... state technicians have been working earnestly to restore the system. Multiple parts have been replaced... however the new equipment is not robust enough to carry the signal. Therefore... more parts have been ordered. At this time... the earliest the NOAA Weather Radio broadcast will be restored is Monday.
Please note... this outage does not affect the Roswell transmitter... wwg-36.
We apologize for the inconvenience and appreciate your patience.
For complete weather information... please visit the National Weather Service website at weather.Gov/abq.