Giveout GIVI1

Upper Montpelier Creek, Bear Lake, ID | 6759ft

Current conditions

Air temperature

46F

Snow depth

0.0in

Snow water equivalent

0.2in

Percipitation accumulation

16.2in

Wind

N direction

0.0mph speed

0.0mph gust


Days:
7 14 30 90 Water year
Created with Highcharts 9.3.2Air Temperature (f)Snow Depth/SWE (in)Giveout 30-Day Hourly SNOTEL DataSnow DepthSnow Water EquivalentAir Temperature2025-05-11 22:002025-05-11 22:…2025-05-12 11:002025-05-13 14:002025-05-14 00:002025-05-14 10:002025-05-14 20:002025-05-15 06:002025-05-15 16:002025-05-16 02:002025-05-16 12:002025-05-16 22:002025-05-17 19:002025-05-18 05:002025-05-18 16:002025-05-19 02:002025-05-19 12:002025-05-19 22:002025-05-20 08:002025-05-20 18:002025-05-21 04:002025-05-21 15:002025-05-22 01:002025-05-22 11:002025-05-22 22:002025-05-23 11:002025-05-23 22:002025-05-24 11:002025-05-25 06:002025-05-25 21:002025-05-26 14:002025-05-27 14:002025-05-28 16:002025-05-30 13:002025-06-01 14:002025-06-02 02:002025-06-02 16:002025-06-03 17:002025-06-04 19:002025-06-05 18:002025-06-06 16:002025-06-07 13:002025-06-08 19:002025-06-09 16:002025-06-10 15:002025-06-11 04:002025-06-11 19:002025-06-12 06:002025-06-12 17:002025-06-13 04:002025-06-13 20:002025-06-14 09:002025-06-14 21:002025-06-15 13:002025-06-15 23:002025-06-16 17:002025-06-17 08:002025-06-17 18:002025-06-18 04:002025-06-18 18:002025-06-19 04:002025-06-19 18:002025-06-20 04:002025-06-20 16:002025-06-21 03:002025-06-21 13:002025-06-21 23:002025-06-22 09:002025-06-22 19:002025-06-23 06:002025-06-23 17:002025-06-24 03:002025-06-24 14:0015°30°45°60°75°90°00.250.50.7511.25Highcharts.com

Partly cloudy, with a low around 44. Light north northwest wind.

Forecast discussion

657 FXUS65 KPIH 250407 AFDPIH Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Pocatello ID 1007 PM MDT Tue Jun 24 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated thunderstorms ending in the early evening tonight. - High pressure will keep skies clear with zero precipitation starting Wednesday. - Afternoon highs near normal by Wednesday, 3 to 8 degrees above normal through the weekend, and 10 to 15 degrees above normal by Monday. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/... Issued at 1244 PM MDT Tue Jun 24 2025 Weak trough moving through southern Canada and western Montana has triggered some light showers (and maybe limited to virga) this afternoon and there is a remote chance of isolated thunderstorms that ends very early in the tonight period. The upper level ridge strengthens for Wed, then holds its own for Thu as another weak shortwave moves across the northern end of this ridge. By Fri, this ridge is getting stronger, which requires the temperature to start increasing. The weak upper level trough on Thu does increase the wind, so expect some gusty wind in the afternoon in the Snake River plain and eastern Magic Valley. This may trigger some Fire Weather and Lake Wind Advisory concerns. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/... Issued at 1244 PM MDT Tue Jun 24 2025 The upper level ridge continues to build, by Mon reaching a peak of 5900m in height. This requires temperatures in the lower elevations solidly in the 90s for eastern Idaho this time of year. Which is what is expected for this time. The nearly clear skies will mean overnight lows should be 35 to 40 deg F cooler than the highs, which will hopefully mean no heat advisories of any kind, but it bears some watching. With this kind of massive high pressure, there are no precipitation or even much in the way of thunderstorm concerns, unless southerly airflow brings in any available monsoon remnants from the desert southwest. Also, wind is not expected to amount to more than terrain-driven diurnal wind. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY/... Issued at 1005 PM MDT Tue Jun 24 2025 For the overnight, expecting clearing skies and light, variable winds across eastern Idaho. More of this is expected for the first part of the day on Wednesday before winds see a bit of an uptick tomorrow afternoon (7-10 kts) with skies remaining mostly clear and free of any precip concerns for regional terminals. Some mid/high level clouds will develop tomorrow afternoon but should have no impacts on aviation interests. && .FIRE WEATHER... Issued at 112 PM MDT Tue Jun 24 2025 The synoptic pattern will gradually transition from longwave troughing this week to longwave ridging next week, with a gradual warming and drying trend continuing throughout. Finer-scale disturbances and shortwaves will govern periods of thunderstorm potential and periods of increased winds. The first such feature...a very weak, "sneaky" shortwave trough (detectable in pressure height fields) will emerge out of Nevada today and ride northeast up the eastern slope of the broader longwave troughing, providing just enough lift for cumulus buildups and perhaps a few showers/thunderstorms focused over mountain areas where terrain will assist in updraft generation. HREF calibrated probability of thunder focuses on the Central Idaho Mountains and Cassia County with a low- end 10-20% chance, and the Upper Snake Highlands into the Big Holes and Teton Valley (especially Zone 411) region with a better 20-40% chance. Overall, CAMs look pretty isolated for most. The next (long- advertised) period of interest is Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, as more organized troughing brushes across the region from the north. Most models are still not supporting much more than a few isolated thunderstorms with this feature (especially north of the Snake Plain), but a tighter pressure gradient will result in stronger winds all three days, especially each afternoon. The NBM currently features a 50-70% chance of wind gusts exceeding 25 MPH Thursday afternoon across most of Zones 410, 411, and 476, and a 30-40% chances across portions of Zones 427 (eastern) and 413. These numbers look quite similar for Friday, perhaps even higher across the Arco Desert and Mud Lake region with an 80% chance of exceeding 25 MPH and a 60-70% chance of exceeding 30 MPH. By this time, some coverage of afternoon RH values less than 15% is expected as well in all of the above mentioned areas, leading to increasing potential for near-critical to critical fire weather conditions in areas where finer fuels are receptive (wind/RH overlap will likely not be that great though across most of Zones 425 and 427 where fuels are currently classified as "approaching critical"). Beyond into the weekend and next week, coverage of critically low RH values will trend more widespread with hot temperatures, yet with lighter winds currently forecast pending our next more organized disturbance. && .PIH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...Messick LONG TERM...Messick AVIATION...McKaughan FIRE WEATHER...01

Nearest avalanche forecast regions

Greys River
40mi away by Bridger-Teton Avalanche Center
No data reported

Logan
45mi away by Utah Avalanche Center
No data reported

Ogden
81mi away by Utah Avalanche Center
No data reported

Tetons
85mi away by Bridger-Teton Avalanche Center
No data reported

Togwotee Pass
103mi away by Bridger-Teton Avalanche Center
No data reported

Salt Lake
116mi away by Utah Avalanche Center
No data reported

Uintas
118mi away by Utah Avalanche Center
No data reported

Provo
140mi away by Utah Avalanche Center
No data reported

Island Park
143mi away by Gallatin NF Avalanche Center
No data reported

Lionhead Area
157mi away by Gallatin NF Avalanche Center
No data reported