Weather
Greybull, Wyoming
Current Conditions
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Almanac
Average High: 91°
Average Low: 54°
Record high/year: 104° (1989)
Record low/year: 46° (1992)
Sunrise: 5:34 AM
Sunset: 8:59 PM
Detailed History
Sun and Moon
Sunrise: 05:34 AM (MDT)
Moon Rise: 08:36 AM (MDT) 7 5
Sunset: 08:59 PM (MDT)
Moon Set: 10:56 PM (MDT) 7 5
Moon Phase
Next 12 Hours
Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database
5-Day Forecast
Forecast for North Big Horn Basin
Tonight
Partly cloudy. Isolated thunderstorms in the evening. Some thunderstorms may produce gusty winds and small hail in the evening. Lows 59 to 62. North winds around 15 mph in the evening. Chance of thunderstorms 20 percent.
Sunday
Partly cloudy. A 30 percent chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon. Some thunderstorms may produce damaging winds and large hail in the afternoon. Highs 82 to 86.
Sunday Night
Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms in the evening...then mostly clear after midnight. Some thunderstorms may produce damaging winds...large hail and heavy rainfall in the evening. Lows around 60.
Monday
Mostly sunny. Highs 85 to 89.
Monday Night
Partly cloudy in the evening then clearing. Lows around 60.
Tuesday
Mostly sunny in the morning...then partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the lower to mid 80s.
Tuesday Night
Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms in the evening...then mostly clear after midnight. Lows in the mid to upper 50s.
Wednesday
Mostly sunny. Highs near 90.
Wednesday Night
Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 50s to lower 60s.
Thursday
Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower to mid 90s.
Thursday Night
Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 50s to lower 60s.
Friday
Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower to mid 90s.
Friday Night
Mostly clear. Lows near 60.
Saturday
Mostly sunny in the morning...then partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the lower to mid 80s.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: APRSWXNET Basin WY US, Basin, WY Updated: 6:31 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 91 °F | Dew Point: 44 °F | Humidity: 20% | Wind: NNE at 1 mph | Pressure: 29.56 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Heat Index: 87 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: Basin, WY Updated: 6:38 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 91.0 °F | Dew Point: 42 °F | Humidity: 18% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: 29.79 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Heat Index: 87 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: MesoWest BALD MTN. WY US SNOTEL, Shell, WY Updated: 5:00 PM MDT |
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| Temperature: 65 °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: Calm | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Heat Index: - | Historical Graphs |
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MSN Maps of: |
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| Temperature | Dew Point | Humidity | Wind | Pressure | Hourly Precipitation | - | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
134 fxus65 kriw 052141 afdriw Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Riverton Wyoming 341 PM MDT Sat Jul 5 2008 Short term...tonight through Tuesday on WV loop this afternoon main features are an upper low moving across Saskatchewan/Manitoba border with shortwave axis across northern High Plains and lagging trough in this split flow drifting across Utah. In between top of middle/high level moisture plume sheared off from northern stream trough leaving remainder across southern Wyoming. At the surface...trough/dryline stretched north to south across central Wyoming with very dry airmass and westerly wind across the southwest half of Wyoming and mainly a light northerly flow with higher dewpoints across the NE half. 20z laps data shows highest convective available potential energy and lowest Li/S across Johnson and Natrona counties with Theta-E ridge stretching back westward just south of The Owl creek mountains. Visible imagery shows enhanced cumulus field just north of this Theta-E ridge on higher dewpoint side. This will be likely initiation area for storms late this afternoon and evening with storms strengthening in more moist unstable airmass to the east. These storms and storms to the north over Montana will help drive front with outflow boundary assist back to the east slopes of The Divide overnight along with higher dewpoints. This front will set the stage for an active day Sunday. Next split trough off the northwest coast will move across the intermountain west tonight into western Wyoming by 00z Monday. GFS shows 60 knot jet streak shooting SW-NE across the area 18z sun-00z Monday over old frontal boundary. GFS continues to show moderate instability from the northern Big Horn basin and across Johnson and Natrona counties Sunday afternoon where the best thunderstorm coverage is expected along with isolated severe storms with large hail and damaging wind. This area also aligns well with timing of jet streak and area of best shear/upper divergence. West of The Divide will see weaker instability and a drier airmass and mostly isolated thunderstorms. Upper trough moves across the area Sunday night with lingering thunderstorms across east central Wyoming into the early Monday morning. 700 mb temperatures to be around 4c cooler Sunday and with high temperatures 5-8f cooler than today. On Monday...upper ridge and drier more stable air push into the west while stationary frontal boundary lingers near the east slopes of The Divide with weak instability behind the front. Not much support aloft with this instability...so thunderstorms should mainly fire off favored convergence regions in the high terrain of central Wyoming and move east-southeast...with northern Johnson County possibly seeing a few stronger or borderline severe storms. Upper trough moving across central Canada Monday and Monday night will help reinforce quasi-stationary front Monday night leaving mainly weak instability and precipitable waters near 0.75 east of The Divide for a continued chance of late day thunderstorms while the west remains mainly stable and dry with above normal temperatures. Long term...Tuesday night through Saturday northwest flow continues Wednesday with the GFS leaving a moist Ely flow east of The Divide. The Euro dries it out some but still leaves some moisture east of The Divide. For now...will expand our probability of precipitation to include our favored northwest flow thunderstorm development areas and see if these trends continue again tonight. Flat Ridge pushes in Thursday for decreasing thunderstorm threat. Will confine thunderstorms chances to just the northern mountains on Friday...a significant trough is forecast to dig into southwestern Canada and possibly the pacnw. Model solutions have changed several times on how strong this trough would be and how far S it would dig. The GFS and European model (ecmwf) are at least in reasonable agreement tonight. Friday may be a hot and breezy to windy day east of The Divide ahead of the associated front. The far west and northwest may see some strong storms with right entrance region jet streak dynamics. Other concern will be potential subtropical moisture being drawn northward in this pattern. Both models show this and it seems to be just a matter of timing. I lean more towards the GFS allowing this be drawn northward fast enough to impact at least our eastern zones and possibly the entire area by Saturday. There is even a chance that the beginnings of this moisture could impact the Red Desert by later Friday. Plenty of time to fine tune the details but it could be a very active thunderstorm period beginning as early as late Friday and then continuing through at least Saturday and perhaps longer. And as has been the case...the really hot temperatures that the GFS has been advertising for days keep getting delayed and the duration keeps shrinking. Luckily we've never bought into those hot GFS temperatures but I have trended some of our highs down even further. A few warm to very warm days will still likely occur but a dry...hot period doesn't appear very likely. && Aviation... widely scattered thunderstorms will continue over western and central Wyoming through the early evening hours. Isolated MVFR conditions are possible in the stronger storms. Strong and gusty outflow wind will be the main aviation impact through this evening. Scattered to numerous thunderstorms are expected over the west Sunday morning and over the central and east during the afternoon and evening. Some of the storms over the central and east may become severe Sunday afternoon and evening with hail and damaging wind gusts. && Fire weather... a surface trough/dryline stretching north to south across central Wyoming this afternoon will be a focus area for isolated thunderstorm development this evening. These storms should strengthen and become more organized as they head into a more moist and unstable airmass across Johnson and Natrona counties. A frontal boundary will push in higher dewpoints back to The Divide overnight setting the stage for scattered thunderstorms across north and central Wyoming Sunday afternoon and evening...with isolated severe storms from the northern Big Horn basin across Johnson and Natrona counties. Storms will be more isolated and dry across southwest Wyoming. An upper ridge will build in Monday bringing warmer and more stable air into the west with isolated storms over the high terrain of central Wyoming. && Riw watches/warnings/advisories... none. && $$ Short term...aem long term...skrbac aviation...church fire weather...aem