Santa Fe New Mexican

Turning up the heat

High-pressure system expected to bring record-high temperatur­es to New Mexico

- By Robert Nott rnott@sfnewmexic­an.com

Santa Fe-area residents may want to keep their warmer fall clothes in the closet for a little longer and pull the extra blankets off their beds.

It’s going to get hot this week. A high-pressure system sitting over New Mexico will bring temperatur­es “approachin­g or exceeding record highs,” said Daniel Porter, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Albuquerqu­e.

“You thought it was hot now for this time of year — it’s going to get a tad warmer,” he said Tuesday, when temperatur­es in the Santa Fe area hovered around the 90-degree mark, setting a standard for what is to come.

Friday, Porter said, will be the hottest day of the week for most of the state, with temperatur­es possibly reaching 93 in Santa Fe. The record for Sept. 10 is 89.

The days leading up to Friday and those that come after likely will see temperatur­es of around 89 or 90.

Communitie­s like Tucumcari and Roswell are expected to experience 100-degree weather, also a record.

There isn’t a drop of rain in the forecast, though anything is possible, Porter said.

“We are not anticipati­ng any precipitat­ion most likely over the next several days,” he said. “The chances aren’t really that great.”

That high-pressure system, which is in no hurry to move away, may weaken enough to bring thundersto­rms to Northern New Mexico this weekend, said meteorolog­ist Alyssa Clements. But, she said, the chance of such a storm system remains low.

Next week is expected to bring similar weather, with “above normal temperatur­es and below precipitat­ion amounts being favored into mid-September,” she said.

Santa Fe received about 5 inches of rain during this summer’s monsoon, Clements said, which is “slightly above normal” for the city’s 4-inch average in a season. The National Weather Service defines New Mexico’s monsoon as running from June 15 through Sept. 30.

“It’s still monsoon season, but no moisture [now],” Porter said. “We need to get this high-pressure system away from us” for thundersto­rms and rain showers to develop.

Though it will be “abnormally hot,” he added, there will be less risk of fire danger because winds will remain light.

Porter and Clements urged residents to drink plenty of water and avoid going outdoors if necessary to reduce any chance of heat-related illnesses in the coming week.

 ?? LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? Celeste Ibraeva, left, and Greta Ruiz of Santa Fe take a lunch break Tuesday at the Santa Fe River. More residents may try to escape record-breaking temperatur­es as a high-pressure system makes its way through the state this week.
LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN Celeste Ibraeva, left, and Greta Ruiz of Santa Fe take a lunch break Tuesday at the Santa Fe River. More residents may try to escape record-breaking temperatur­es as a high-pressure system makes its way through the state this week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States